National Coding Advice (NCA): What Australian Coders Should Know

Post Author:

TalentMed

Share This:
Australian clinical coder referencing National Coding Advice on a home office desktop with ICD-10-AM book beside her

Classifications Explained

National Coding Advice (NCA): What Australian Coders Should Know

National Coding Advice (NCA) is the official, quarterly-updated guidance published by IHACPA that tells Australian clinical coders how to apply the Australian Coding Standards (ACS) in specific real-world scenarios the standards themselves don’t fully resolve. NCA sits alongside the ACS, ICD-10-AM and ACHI, and every working coder consults it as part of normal episode coding.

This guide explains what NCA is, where to find it, how it relates to the ACS, how coders apply NCA day to day, and what changes with each new edition. It’s written for HLT50321 students, career changers, and anyone wanting a clear introduction to how Australia’s clinical coding guidance is maintained between editions.

What is National Coding Advice?

National Coding Advice is IHACPA’s official Q&A-style guidance that clarifies how the Australian Coding Standards apply to specific clinical scenarios. NCA supplements the ACS; it does not replace it. Where the ACS is the published rulebook, NCA is the running interpretive layer that keeps coders aligned between editions.

NCA exists because clinical practice moves faster than the edition cycle. New procedures appear, new clinical terminology enters discharge summaries, and coders across Australia hit the same ambiguity at roughly the same time. Rather than let each hospital reach its own answer, IHACPA publishes formal NCA entries that resolve the question nationally, so coders in Brisbane, Perth and Hobart all apply the same rule.

Structurally, NCA comes in two forms: Coding Rules, which clarify how existing standards apply to a scenario, and edition FAQs, which answer common implementation questions when a new edition is released. Both types are searchable by reference number (for example Q2756, P182, TN126), carry a published date and an updated date, and remain in force until superseded or incorporated into the next edition of the ACS.

Who publishes NCA and how often

NCA is published and maintained by the Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority (IHACPA), the Australian Government agency responsible for national health pricing and classifications. New NCA is released quarterly.

IHACPA took over responsibility for the classifications in July 2022 when aged-care pricing was added to the remit of the former Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (IHPA). The classifications themselves were developed and maintained by the Australian Consortium for Classification Development (ACCD) under IHPA before that. The publisher has changed; the structured edition cycle and quarterly NCA rhythm have continued.

A new Coding Rule or FAQ response becomes applicable for separations starting the month after it is published. That matters because a coder may be working on an episode from, say, August while IHACPA has just published a clarification that takes effect from September. Knowing which NCAs apply to the episode’s date of separation, not just today’s date, is part of careful coding practice.

How to access NCA

Current NCA is published on IHACPA’s website and in the Australian Classification Exchange (ACE), the searchable online database of all current Coding Rules and edition FAQs.

  • IHACPA National Coding Advice page at ihacpa.gov.au/resources/national-coding-advice. This is the authoritative landing page and lists current Coding Rules, edition FAQs, and retired NCA.
  • Australian Classification Exchange (ACE), IHACPA’s searchable online portal for current NCA. Coders search by reference number, keyword, ACS standard, or code.
  • Digital coding software. Most Australian coding tools integrate NCA with ICD-10-AM, ACHI and the ACS so a search within the software surfaces the relevant rule inline as you code.
  • Refer to the latest online version rather than a downloaded copy. IHACPA revises NCA as clinical practice and the standards evolve, so a locally saved PDF can drift out of date within a quarter.

HLT50321 students get access to an integrated coding environment that includes NCA alongside the ICD-10-AM, ACHI and ACS books, so they learn the habit of consulting NCA as a normal part of the coding workflow from day one.

NCA and the ACS: how they fit together

The ACS is the normative rulebook. NCA is the interpretive guidance. Coders read both together on any episode where the standards alone leave room for interpretation.

A useful way to think about it: the ACS sets the rule, and NCA answers the practical “yes but what about this case?” questions that come up when the rule meets real clinical documentation. NCAs do not overwrite a standard. They interpret it. If an NCA and the ACS appear to conflict, the coder re-reads both and applies the NCA’s interpretation of the standard; the NCA exists precisely to remove the apparent conflict.

When a new edition of the ACS is released, IHACPA commonly incorporates the intent of recent NCAs into the revised standard text. Older NCAs that are fully covered by the new edition are retired. This is why a working coding unit keeps a short list of the NCAs currently relevant to its most common case types, and refreshes the list after each edition change.

Three NCA examples Australian coders actually use

The following examples come from IHACPA’s current NCA library and illustrate the three most common kinds of advice: a classification clarification, a procedure clarification, and an interpretation of a specific ACS standard. Each is identified by its reference number and published date.

Q2756 · Published 15 June 2012 · Updated 16 June 2025

Diabetes mellitus and unspecified proteinuria. Clarifies whether E1-.22 diabetes mellitus with established diabetic nephropathy can be assigned when the documentation records diabetes and unspecified proteinuria. The NCA directs the coder back to the Directives in ACS 0401 Diabetes mellitus and intermediate hyperglycaemia and sets out when the diabetic nephropathy code is and is not supported by the documentation. This is a classification NCA: it tells coders how to read documentation against an existing standard.

Q2719 · Published 15 June 2013 · Updated 16 June 2025

Management of tracheostomy. Clarifies when it is appropriate to assign the ACHI code 90179-06 [568] Management of tracheostomy. The NCA explains that tracheostomy management includes care such as suctioning and cleaning, and sets out the circumstances in which the code applies. This is a procedure NCA: it tells coders when a specific ACHI code is and is not supported.

Q2874 · Published 15 March 2015 · Updated 16 June 2025

Interpretation of ACS 0936 Cardiac pacemakers and implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICD). Answers how specific wording in the standard should be interpreted for classifying the insertion of electrodes for implantable cardiac devices. This is a standard-interpretation NCA: it exists purely to remove ambiguity in how the ACS text is applied.

Each NCA is a small, focused piece of guidance that, taken together, forms the running layer of practical advice coders consult alongside the standards.

How coders apply NCA day to day

Applying NCA is a normal step in the episode-coding workflow, not an exception. Senior coders check NCA as part of their default routine, particularly on episodes involving diabetes, neoplasms, cardiac procedures, obstetrics, and mental-health presentations, where new advice appears most often.

  • Identify the candidate codes using the standard index and tabular workflow across the yellow index, red tabular, green index, and blue tabular.
  • Apply the relevant ACS (for example ACS 0001 Principal diagnosis, ACS 0002 Additional diagnoses, ACS 0401 Diabetes mellitus) to select and sequence the codes.
  • Search NCA by reference number, keyword, or ACS standard for any interpretive issue the episode raises, for example a specific device insertion, a stress-hyperglycaemia admission, or an ambiguous documentation pattern.
  • Check the applicable date. Ensure each NCA you rely on was in force for the separation date of the episode, not just today.
  • Query the treating clinician when documentation is silent on a point the NCA or ACS requires. NCA often sets out the documentation coders can reasonably expect before applying a code.
  • Record the NCA reference in the audit trail where required, so internal audit or external review can see the reasoning that produced the code set.

This discipline is what separates competent coders from experts. Memorising every NCA is not the goal; knowing which NCAs are likely to apply, and consulting them in the moment, is.

NCA and edition updates

The Thirteenth Edition 2025 of ICD-10-AM, ACHI and the ACS, effective for separations from 1 July 2025, is the current edition. When IHACPA releases a new edition, a substantial amount of recent NCA is incorporated into the revised standard text and the corresponding older NCAs are retired.

Practical implications for working coders and students:

  • Read the edition’s Reference to Changes document, which lists the standards revised and the NCAs incorporated or retired.
  • Stop applying retired NCAs to episodes with separation dates on or after the new edition’s implementation date.
  • Re-check the NCAs your team relies on most after each edition. Some will have moved into the ACS text; others will still be live as NCA.
  • Refresh internal coding guides and crib sheets to match the new edition so the team is not applying superseded advice from memory.

HLT50321 students are trained on the current edition and on the habit of working with NCA alongside the standards, so edition changes become routine rather than disruptive.

Learning to work with NCA through HLT50321

Australian coders learn how to work with NCA through our HLT50321 Diploma of Clinical Coding, a 12-month, 100% online qualification built around real Australian coding scenarios using integrated digital coding software.

The Diploma teaches the ACS, ICD-10-AM, and ACHI as the core classifications, and introduces NCA as the running interpretive layer coders use alongside them. Because the software environment is integrated, students develop the instinct to search for a relevant Coding Rule or FAQ the moment an episode raises a question, rather than guessing. By the time graduates reach their first coding role, consulting NCA is automatic.

Related reading

Start here

Frequently asked questions

National Coding Advice (NCA) is the official guidance published by IHACPA that clarifies how the Australian Coding Standards (ACS) apply to specific clinical scenarios. NCA comes in two forms: Coding Rules, which clarify how existing standards apply, and edition FAQs, which answer implementation questions when a new edition is released. NCA supplements the ACS; it does not replace it.
NCA is published by the Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority (IHACPA), the Australian Government agency responsible for national health pricing and classifications. IHACPA took over the classifications in July 2022 from the former Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (IHPA), which in turn worked with the Australian Consortium for Classification Development (ACCD).
NCA is published quarterly. A new Coding Rule or FAQ response becomes applicable for separations starting the month after it is published. Coders should refer to the latest online version on the IHACPA website or the Australian Classification Exchange (ACE), not a downloaded copy, because NCA is revised as practice and the standards evolve.
Current NCA is published on IHACPA’s National Coding Advice page at ihacpa.gov.au/resources/national-coding-advice and in the Australian Classification Exchange (ACE), IHACPA’s searchable online portal. Most Australian coders also access NCA through digital coding software that integrates it with ICD-10-AM, ACHI and the ACS.
No. NCA supplements the ACS; it does not overwrite it. The ACS is the published rulebook, and NCA is the interpretive guidance that clarifies how the standards apply to specific scenarios. Where an NCA and the ACS appear to conflict, the coder applies the NCA’s interpretation of the standard, because NCA exists precisely to remove the apparent conflict.
When IHACPA releases a new edition, recent NCAs are often incorporated into the revised standard text and the corresponding older NCAs are retired. Coders stop applying retired NCAs to episodes with separation dates on or after the new edition’s implementation date, and refresh their internal guides to match the edition. The current edition is the Thirteenth Edition 2025, effective for separations from 1 July 2025.
Each NCA entry has a reference number (for example Q2756, P182, TN126), a title, a published date, and an updated date where applicable. Coders cite the reference number when documenting the reasoning behind a code set, so internal audit or external review can trace the interpretation back to the published advice.
Apply the NCA in force on the episode’s date of separation. A coder working on an older episode may find that the NCA library has moved on since the separation; the rule that applied at the time of the episode is the one to use. Knowing which NCAs applied when is part of careful coding practice, especially during edition transitions.
Coding Rules are one kind of NCA. IHACPA publishes NCA as Coding Rules, which clarify how existing standards apply to specific scenarios, and as edition FAQs, which answer common implementation questions when a new edition is released. Coders use both. When a reference number is quoted, it is typically a Coding Rule.
Yes. The HLT50321 Diploma of Clinical Coding teaches the ACS, ICD-10-AM and ACHI as the core classifications, and introduces NCA as the running interpretive layer coders use alongside them. Students train in an integrated digital coding environment that includes NCA, so consulting a relevant Coding Rule becomes an automatic part of the workflow by graduation.

Want to find out more?

Speak to a TalentMed course adviser about HLT50321.
12 months, 100% online, flexible payment plans, daily intakes year-round.

Preferred method of contact *
HLT50321 Clinical Coding course information pack

Share this Article