F40.291

Billable

Gynephobia

Gynephobia

Status

Billable / Specific

Block

F40-F48

Parent Code

F40.29

Coding Notes

Inclusion Terms

Alternative clinical terms for this condition

  • Fear of women

Includes

Conditions included under this code

  • disorders of psychological development

Excludes 2

Conditions not included here, but the patient may have both

  • symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical laboratory findings, not elsewhere classified (R00-R99)
  • dysmorphophobia (nondelusional) (F45.22)
  • nosophobia (F45.22)

Also Known As / Clinical Terms

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the ICD-10 code for gynephobia?

The ICD-10-CM code for gynephobia is F40.291. The full clinical description is "Gynephobia". F40.291 is a billable/specific code that can be used on insurance claims and medical billing.

What does ICD-10 code F40.291 mean?

ICD-10-CM code F40.291 represents "Gynephobia". It is classified under Chapter 5: Mental, Behavioral and Neurodevelopmental Disorders and is a billable/specific code that can be used on a claim.

Is F40.291 a billable code?

Yes, F40.291 is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code and can be used to indicate a diagnosis on a medical claim.

What chapter is F40.291 in?

F40.291 is in Chapter 5: Mental, Behavioral and Neurodevelopmental Disorders (codes F01-F99).

What SNOMED CT codes does F40.291 map to?

F40.291 maps to 1 SNOMED CT concept: 102930000. SNOMED CT is a clinical terminology used in electronic health records.

What are the UMLS CUIs for F40.291?

F40.291 is linked to 1 UMLS Concept Unique Identifier: C0522195. The UMLS (Unified Medical Language System) integrates multiple biomedical vocabularies maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Automate ICD-10 Coding With AI

Send clinical text to the AutoICD API and get back structured ICD-10 codes with confidence scores. Integrates into any EHR or billing system in minutes.

Includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) used by permission of SNOMED International. Includes content from the UMLS Metathesaurus, courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.