O47 ICD 10 Code is a non-billable and non-specific code and should not be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes. There are other codes below it with greater level of diagnosis detail. The 2023 edition of the American ICD-10-CM code became effective on October 1, 2022.
Includes for O47 ICD 10 code
- Braxton Hicks contractions
- threatened labor
Type 1 excludes for O47 ICD 10 code
- preterm labor (O60.-)
Codes
- O47.0 False labor before 37 completed weeks of gestation
- O47.00 False labor before 37 completed weeks of gestation, unspecified trimester
- O47.02 False labor before 37 completed weeks of gestation, second trimester
- O47.03 False labor before 37 completed weeks of gestation, third trimester
- O47.1 False labor at or after 37 completed weeks of gestation
- O47.9 False labor, unspecified
Possible back-references that may be applicable or related to O47 ICD10 Code:
- O00-O9A Pregnancy, childbirth and the puerperium
- O30-O48 Maternal care related to the fetus and amniotic cavity and possible delivery problems
Present On Admission (POA Exempt)
O47 ICD 10 code is considered exempt from POA reporting
Clinical information about O47 ICD 10 code
When you are ready to have your baby, you'll go through labor. Labor is the process of giving birth. Signs that you might be going into labor include:
- Contractions that are regular then start to come closer together
- Leaking fluid or bleeding from the vagina
- Low, dull backache
- Abdominal cramps
Call your health care provider if you have any of these signs, even if it is before your due date. Preterm labor can start before 37 completed weeks of pregnancy.
Labor happens in three stages. The first stage begins with contractions. It continues until your cervix has become thinner and dilated (stretched) to about 4 inches wide. The second stage is the active stage, in which you begin to push downward. Crowning is when your baby's scalp comes into view. Shortly afterward, your baby is born. In the third stage, you deliver the placenta. The placenta is the organ that supplied food and oxygen to your baby during pregnancy.
Mothers and babies are monitored closely during labor. Most women are able to have a baby through normal vaginal delivery. If there are complications, the baby may need to be delivered surgically by a Cesarean section.
NIH: National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
The information in this box was provided by MedlinePlus.gov