ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Code O75.8 - Other specified complications of labor and delivery (original) (raw)

ICD List Logo

ICD List 2025-2026 Edition

  1. Home
  2. ICD-10-CM Codes
  3. O00-O9A
  4. O60-O77
  5. O75
  6. 2026 ICD-10-CM Code O75.8

Other specified complications of labor and delivery

ICD-10-CM Code:

O75.8

ICD-10 Code for:

Other specified complications of labor and delivery

Is Billable?

Not Valid for Submission

Code Navigator:

O75.8 is a non-specific and non-billable diagnosis code code, consider using a code with a higher level of specificity from the list below for a diagnosis of other specified complications of labor and delivery. The code is not specific and is NOT valid for the year 2026 for the submission of HIPAA-covered transactions. Category or Header define the heading of a category of codes that may be further subdivided by the use of 4th, 5th, 6th or 7th characters.

Non-specific codes like O75.8 require more digits to indicate the appropriate level of specificity. Consider using any of the following billable codes with a higher level of specificity when coding for other specified complications of labor and delivery:

Use O75.81 for Maternal exhaustion complicating labor and delivery

Use O75.82 for Onset (spontaneous) of labor after 37 completed weeks of gestation but before 39 completed weeks gestation, with delivery by (planned) cesarean section

Use O75.89 for Other specified complications of labor and delivery

  1. Code Information
  2. Specific Coding
  3. Tabular List of Diseases and Injuries
  4. Patient Education
  5. Other Codes Used Similar Conditions
  6. Code History

Childbirth Problems

Childbirth is the process of giving birth to a baby. It includes labor and delivery. Usually everything goes well, but problems can happen. They may cause a risk to the mother, baby, or both. Some of the more common childbirth problems include:

If you have problems in childbirth, your health care provider may need to give you medicines to induce or speed up labor, use tools to help guide the baby out of the birth canal, or deliver the baby by Cesarean section.

NIH: National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

[Learn More in MedlinePlus]