Certificate of Achievement in Cancer Information Management
Santa Barbara, USA
DURATION
1 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
Request application deadline
EARLIEST START DATE
Request earliest startdate
TUITION FEES
USD 419 / per credit
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
Introduction
The Cancer Information Management (CIM) Program will prepare students for positions in hospital-based and population-based cancer registries. Responsibilities typically include: identification of reportable cancer cases, abstraction of pertinent cancer data from patient records, pathology, radiology, and surgical reports, coding and staging primary site, histology and extent of disease, monitoring completeness, timeliness, and quality of cancer data, performing cancer patient follow-up activities to identify second primaries, recurrence and spread of disease, reporting cancer data to health care officials, hospital administrators, physicians, and regulatory organizations for use in cancer prevention and control, assisting the medical staff and epidemiologists in special studies and research, and supervising staff.
The Cancer Information Management (CIM) Program will prepare students for positions in hospital-based and population-based cancer registries. Responsibilities typically include: identification of reportable cancer cases, abstraction of pertinent cancer data from patient records, pathology, radiology, and surgical reports, coding and staging primary site, histology and extent of disease, monitoring completeness, timeliness, and quality of cancer data, performing cancer patient follow-up activities to identify second primaries, recurrence and spread of disease, reporting cancer data to health care officials, hospital administrators, physicians, and regulatory organizations for use in cancer prevention and control, assisting the medical staff and epidemiologists in special studies and research, and supervising staff.
SBCC offers a Transfer Agreement Guarantee (TAG). A TAG is a contractual agreement between the student, SBCC, and specific four-year colleges or universities. This includes six University of California ( *UC) institutions, six California State Institutions (CSU), seven California private institutions, nine out-of-state institutions, as well as Honors Transfer Agreements with ten institutions and 8 CSUs without campus impaction. Students must enroll in the TAG program and work with a TAG advisor. Please click here to learn more on the TAG program website.
Admissions
Scholarships and Funding
Enrolled students may apply one time per year in February. If awarded, the money is disbursed for the following academic year in two parts: half in the fall semester and half in the spring semester. The amounts range from very small: $100-750 and larger $1000-2500 with some variations in between.
Curriculum
HIT 101 Introduction to Health Information Management (3 Units)
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Introduction to the fundamental theories/practices of HIT, including health services organization and delivery; health data/record structure, content/standards; HIT functions/responsibilities; information systems, technologies/requirements; health information privacy/security.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 102 Legal Aspects Of Health Care (3 Units)
Corequisites: HIT 101.
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Prerequisite or Introduction to legal issues pertaining to healthcare, health information and the health record as a legal document. Patient privacy and confidentiality, patient rights, release of information, informed consents, advance directives, compliance, fraud and abuse, HIPAA and E-Health.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 135 Basic Medical Terminology (3 Units)
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Introduction to medical terminology for body structure, body systems and diagnostic work. Prefixes, suffixes, word roots and combined word forms. Includes instruction in spelling, definition, and pronunciation.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 201 Pharmacology For Allied Health (2 Units)
Prerequisites: BMS 146.
Course Advisories: HIT 135.
Hours: 36 (36 lecture)
Introduction to pharmacology, basic pharmacological terminology and concepts, drug categories and their uses, mechanisms of drug action, dosage forms, routes of administration, and common generic and trade name medications.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 202 International Classification of Diseases, Diagnostic Coding (2 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 135 and BMS 146 and HIT 101 and HIT 204 (HIT 204 may be taken concurrently).
Course Advisories: HIT 201.
Hours: 36 (36 lecture)
Beginning overview of nomenclature and classification systems, with focus on coding inpatient clinical information from medical records. Instruction in coding diagnoses, using International Classification of Diseases, sequencing and coding conventions. Coding software applications introduced.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 203 International Classification of Diseases, Procedural Coding (3 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 135 and BMS 146 and HIT 101 and HIT 204.
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Overview, structure and organization of International Classification of Diseases, Procedure Classification System (ICD-10-PCS). Instruction in coding procedures per national coding guidelines. Coding software applications (Encoder) will be used, and coding instruction will entail coding from cases and health records.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 204 Basic Pathophysiology (3 Units)
Prerequisites: BMS 146.
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Introduction to the fundamentals of pathophysiology, focusing on essential concepts of physiologic changes and altered functions in the human body resulting from disease processes. Principles from A&P and chemistry provide the foundation for the study of pathophysiology, body systems, etiology and pathogenesis. Diagnostic procedures, preventative measures and current therapeutic regimens are explored.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 205 Advanced Coding Applications (4 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 202 and HIT 203 and HIT 210.
Course Advisories: HIT 255.
Hours: 72 (72 lecture)
Advanced medical coding for addressing more complex issues relating to ICD and HCPCS/CPT coding. Lectures and assignments focus on using case studies, graded discussions, written assignments, mock records and applying learning at a higher coding skill level. Computerized encoders and groupers emphasized.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 210 CPT Procedural Coding (3 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 101 and HIT 135 and BMS 146.
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Beginning HCPCS/CPT coding class for ambulatory services coding related to facility and professional services, with overview of coding conventions, principles, regulatory guidance and coding software.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 220 HIM Statistics (2 Units)
Prerequisites: CIS 101 or COMP 101 and HIT 101 (may be taken concurrently).
Hours: 36 (36 lecture)
Introduction to healthcare statistics, including a review of mathematics, interpretation of healthcare statistical formulas, presentation of data and application of medical research tools. Use of statistics in relation to long-range healthcare planning and development, application of automated systems, integration of reports and registration of vital statistics.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 230 Alternative Delivery Systems (2 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 101.
Course Advisories: COMP 101 and HIT 240.
Hours: 36 (36 lecture)
Introduction to Health Information Management practice in alternative healthcare delivery systems, including ambulatory, long-term and managed care, mental health, rehabilitation medicine, and hospice and home health. Focuses on regulatory and accreditation requirements, funding and reimbursement, transition to the EHR, and health data privacy and security.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 240 HC Quality Management (3 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 101 and COMP 101 or CIS 101.
Course Advisories: HIT 255.
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Applies continuous healthcare quality management and performance improvement principles to the hospital setting, focusing on historical, theoretical, and practical applications and methodologies. Includes data collection and analysis; regulatory, accreditation and patient safety compliance; credentialing and utilization; and case and risk management.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 255 Medical Insurance and Reimbursement Methodologies (4 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 102, 202 and 203 (all may be taken concurrently).
Course Advisories: HIT 210.
Hours: 72 (72 lecture)
Introduction to the basics of medical insurance billing. Current payment methodologies in the inpatient, hospital outpatient, and physician office settings. Focus on compliance with regulatory requirements and common billing practices.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 265 HIM Computer Applications (3 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 101 and COMP 101 or CIS 101.
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Intermediate level systems class focusing on computer applications in healthcare and health information management. Includes application of basic computer and communication concepts and technologies, systems development and analysis, work flow mapping, queries and reports for information retrieval, and migration to the electronic health record.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 275 HIT Practicum (4.5 Units)
Prerequisites: HIT 202 and HIT 203 and HIT 220 and HIT 240 and HIT 255 and HIT 265 and HIT 210.
Hours: 135 (54 lecture, 81 lab)
Limitation on enrollment: Health and Safety regulations. A physical examination and up-to-date immunizations are required at student’s own expense. A background check and drug screen may be required at student’s own expense by the practicum site. Supervised onsite experience performing CAHIIM-required HIT competencies for an affiliated healthcare organization. Clinical practice is conducted as a non-paid, laboratory experience and includes a partial virtual practicum.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 280 Medical Coding Practicum (1 Unit)
Prerequisites: HIT 202 and HIT 203 and HIT 210 and HIT 255.
Corequisites: Concurrent enrollment in HIT 205.
Limitations on Enrollment: Health and Safety regulations.
Hours: 54 (54 lab)
A physical examination and up-to-date immunizations are required at student's own expense, and a background check may be required at student’s own expense by the practicum site. Capstone course for the Medical Coding Specialist Certificate program. Emphasizes the application of clinical classification systems and evaluation of coded and abstracted data. This seminar course has online assignments, projects, and can also be partially completed by going onsite to an acute care faculty. If going onsite, students are supervised and hold the status of learner. Students can also complete all course requirements in the online format.
Transfer Information: CSU Transferable
HIT 284 Coding Exam Preparation (3 Units)
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
Review of principles of HIM documentation, coding reimbursement methodologies, compliance, and data quality to prepare medical coding certificate and medical coders for national coding certification examinations. Focus is on reviewing materials covered in the MCS Program, and on test-taking and studying techniques/strategies using mock test questions, discussion boards and other resources.
HIT 285 Registered Health Information Technician Exam Preparation (3 Units)
Hours: 54 (54 lecture)
In-depth review of HIM principles and applications to prepare HIT program graduates for the AHIMA National RHIT examination. Focus is on reviewing materials covered in the HIT Program, as well as test-taking and studying techniques. Students use links to mock test questions, discussion boards and other resources to prepare them for the national exam.
Program Outcome
Learning Outcomes
- Demonstrate ability to coordinate all functions related to an approved American College of Surgeons program.
- Apply legal, ethical, accreditation and certification standards to the cancer registry and demonstrate professional behavior in these areas.
- Evaluate and interpret current coding and staging guidelines to identify cancer disease and its process, while documenting quality abstracts.
- Apply current treatment guidelines/codes, while documenting quality abstracts
- Participate in follow-up procedures and data quality analysis and utilization to improve patient care and facilitate with facility planning/expansion.
English Language Requirements
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