Published June 2026

Depression is more than a behavioral health diagnosis. It can increase disease burden and complicate management of comorbid conditions. Across care settings, depression may worsen symptom burden, affect functional status, and interfere with treatment adherence and self-management. Its impact on engagement in care and overall health outcomes makes it clinically relevant for Providers across specialties.

Documentation

Precise and detailed documentation is essential for representing the patient’s status and enabling correct code selection. Please refer to the following guidelines:

  • State the diagnosis clearly: document the current depressive disorder, such as adjustment disorder and/or major depressive disorder in remission.
  • Include, when applicable:
    • Current status, such as active, stable, improving, worsening, or controlled
    • Episode type, for example single or recurrent occurrences
    • Severity, categorized as mild, moderate, or severe
    • Remission status, including partial or full remission
    • Presence of psychotic features
  • Show visit-level support: utilize TAMPER (treat, assess, monitor/medicate, plan, evaluate, refer) to convey how depression was addressed during the encounter. Include relevant symptoms and reviewed screening results.

Coding

Accurate coding requires documentation that specifies the type, severity, and current status of the depressive disorder.

Code

Diagnosis

F32.0

Major depressive disorder, single episode, mild

F32.1

Major depressive disorder, single episode, moderate

F32.2

Major depressive disorder, single episode, severe without psychotic features

F32.3

Major depressive disorder, single episode, severe with psychotic features

F32.4

Major depressive disorder, single episode, in partial remission

F32.5

Major depressive disorder, single episode, in full remission

F32.9

Major depressive disorder, single episode, unspecified

F32.A

Depression, unspecified

F33.0

Major depressive disorder, recurrent, mild

F33.1

Major depressive disorder, recurrent, moderate

F33.2

Major depressive disorder, recurrent severe without psychotic features

F33.3

Major depressive disorder, recurrent, severe with psychotic symptoms

F33.40

Major depressive disorder, recurrent, in remission, unspecified

F33.41

Major depressive disorder, recurrent, in partial remission

Closing Gaps in Care

Review other articles in this issue regarding closing gaps in care.