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F24ICD-10-CM

Chapter 5 · F01–F99 · Mental, Behavioral & Neurodevelopmental

Shared psychotic disorder

F24 is the ICD10 code used for documenting Shared psychotic disorder in clinical and billing records.

What F24 covers · when clinicians use it

ICD-10 code F24 identifies Shared psychotic disorder in the U.S. ICD-10-CM clinical and billing record set. It sits within the Mental, Behavioral & Neurodevelopmental chapter (F01–F99), the section that groups related diagnoses so providers, payers, and public-health agencies report them consistently. Clinicians and medical coders apply F24 when an encounter's findings match the Shared psychotic disorder description, attaching it to the patient record so downstream insurance claims, payer audits, quality reporting, and epidemiological surveillance all reference the same standardized diagnosis. The ICD-10-CM is maintained by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics, with an updated official code set released each U.S. fiscal year — always verify F24 against the current CMS/CDC release and your payer's documentation guidance before final use. This page summarizes documentation context for F24 and is a coding reference, not clinical, diagnostic, or billing advice.

F24 refers to Shared psychotic disorder, a category of psychotic disorders characterized by disruptions in thinking, perception, emotional regulation, and behavior. These conditions often involve hallucinations, delusions, disorganized speech or behavior, and significant functional impairment.

Symptoms

  • Delusions – Strongly held false beliefs not based in reality
  • Hallucinations – Seeing, hearing, or feeling things that aren’t there
  • Disorganized thinking – Evident through incoherent speech or erratic responses
  • Social withdrawal – A common sign in schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorders
  • Mood symptoms – Depression or mania seen in F25 schizoaffective disorders
  • Suspiciousness or paranoia – Particularly in F22 delusional disorder
  • Short-term confusion – Seen in F23 brief psychotic disorder

Diagnosis

Diagnosis of Shared psychotic disorder includes psychiatric evaluation, observation over time, ruling out substance use or physiological causes, and using DSM-5 or ICD10 criteria. Neuroimaging or labs may be used to exclude other conditions like tumors or infections.

ICD10 Code Usage

ICD10 code F24 is primarily used in psychiatry, neurology, and general medicine to document psychotic disorders that are not substance-induced. It facilitates care coordination, medication management, insurance coding, and longitudinal mental health monitoring.

Related Codes

FAQs

Q1: What is ICD10 code F24?
A: This code refers to Shared psychotic disorder, a psychotic disorder not caused by substances or medical illness, often affecting thought and behavior.

Q2: Are these conditions lifelong?
A: Some conditions like schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder are chronic, while others like brief psychotic disorder may resolve fully.

Q3: What is the treatment approach?
A: Antipsychotic medications, psychotherapy, psychosocial rehabilitation, and sometimes hospitalization.

Q4: How are these disorders different from mood or anxiety disorders?
A: Psychotic disorders primarily affect perception and cognition, while mood/anxiety disorders affect emotion and arousal.

Q5: Who manages these disorders?
A: Psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, and community mental health teams.

Conclusion

ICD10 code F24 is crucial for identifying and managing Shared psychotic disorder. Accurate coding enables targeted psychiatric treatment, long-term care planning, and supports mental health advocacy and research initiatives.

Source: ICD-10-CM (CMS / CDC NCHS official code set)

Last reviewed:

This page is a documentation reference for the ICD-10-CM code set and is not clinical, diagnostic, or billing advice. Always verify codes against the official ICD-10-CM source and your payer's guidelines.

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