PCR A Quality Improvement Program By Robert Delagi, BS
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Transcript PCR A Quality Improvement Program By Robert Delagi, BS
Pre-Hospital Care Reports
A Quality Improvement Program
Karl W. Klug, B.S., EMT-CC
Deputy Chief of Operations
Suffolk County EMS
Remember when?
Patchogue, please
report to Triage with
your patient….
Brookhaven out.
Leah, did you
fill out a PCR
on that guy?
Ummm, no
Ron, I thought
you were
going to…
What’s the PCR’s Purpose?
Statewide data collection system
Serves as a confidential and legal medical
record
Quality Improvement instrument
Standardized format for all providers
Instrument to provide continuity of care
between prehospital and hospital settings
Recently revised as Version 5 (2/04)
Housekeeping Rules
NYS-DOH states
agencies need to have
written policy dictating
guidelines for
completion, storage,
access, and release of
PCRs
Medical Records can
only be released on
certain conditions
(more later!!!)
When should a PCR be
completed?
One PCR for:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Every patient on every call
Treated by one unit transported by another (004)
RMA w/ informed consent (005)
Call canceled (006)
Stand-by only (007)
No patient found (008)
Every event i.e. Lift assist … (010)
To document every request for EMS that your agency receives,
whether you handle the call, or not, or whether there is a patient
or not
Other Response
A PCR is to be generated for every request
for ambulance response
Call canceled enroute by PD, MedCom, or chief
No crew shows up and you 24 the call
Fire standbys for the local FD
Ambulance response to fires within your own
FD
Who gets which copy?
– WHITE (original) retained by the EMS agency
– PINK stays with the patient in the emergency
department
– YELLOW is forwarded to Medical Control
For screening, local quality improvement, and submission to
Statewide data processing
May be exceptions for regionally-approved studies, i.e. intubation
confirmation, AED use, etc…
What about “No Transports”?
DOA or Field Discontinuance of
Prehospital Resuscitation
Cancelled while enroute by PD / Chief
Unfounded
RMA
Treated but refused transport
Stand-by
What about “No Transports?”
On “no transports” the Agency is responsible
to mail the yellow copy to Medical Control by
the 20th of EVERY month to:
Stony Brook University Medical Center
Department of Emergency Medicine - EMS
SUNY at Stony Brook
Stony Brook, New York 11794-8350
Attn.: PCR Inspection
Tiered Response
For every patient, for every leg of the
trip
From same agency = 1 PCR
NYS DOH 02-05 (supersedes 93-05 and 85-01)
When flycar arrives at scene before ambulance –
in old BLS manual, has been changed
From different agencies = 2 PCR’s
Each documents only what their service did
PCR’s are.......
Medical
Records - Permanent part of the
patients chart
Legal
Documents - Proof of your assessment
and treatment
Standardized
Records - Statistical collection of
Statewide information
Confidentiality
The form and information contained on
the form is confidential
EMS providers have a legal obligation
to protect the confidentiality of patients
EMS Providers must comply with new
federal HIPAA requirements
HIPAA
Promulgated in 1996, Compliance effective
April 14, 2003.
Covered entities include
– All providers of health care services
– billing clearinghouses
– insurance plans
Effects our
– PCR retention schedule
– use of PHI as part of the QI process
– release of PHI that you collect
The PCR should be a
reflection of...
Assessment of
patient and
scene
Care rendered
by crew
And should include...
Pertinent +/- findings
Interventions
Changes in status
Response to those changes
And should include...
OPQRST
SAMPLE
All Vital Signs
Head-to-toe exam, vectored when appropriate
SOAP
Subjective: what the
patient tells you, history
of the present illness
Objective: P/E, +/findings
Assessment: prehospital
impression and
differentials
Plan of treatment: what
you did and the patient’s
response to the treatment
What To Write
Chief
Complaint - in the patients own words
Subjective Assessment - history of present
illness
events leading up to..., secondary complaints, MOI
Presenting
Problem - simple check-box format
PMH/Meds/Allergy - document all pertinent
history
be aware of heart/lung disease, diabetes, seizure
What To Write
Objective
Physical Exam - Systematic
approach, cover all body areas and
don’t forget pertinent negatives
How you found the patient, what problems
you found, what you did to fix the
problem, and the response to your efforts
to fix the problem
What To Write
Treatment
Given - simple check-box format
Continuation Form for ALS suggested but not required (with
the exception of controlled substances)
Disposition
Crew
- Don’t forget the code
- Names and State EMT numbers only!
Badge/member numbers are UNACCEPTABLE!
Why The Need For A
Comprehensive PCR?
Enhance
patient care
Enhance
your position as a health care
professional
Ensure
that your EMS agency has satisfactory
legal evidence documenting the response
Limit Your Liability
September 2002- EMS crew in New Jersey
transported a patient to local ED after suffering a
blow to his head
Hospital discharged patient after concluding that
injury was not serious
Patient developed seizures, became comatose and
was declared brain dead 4 days later and died
ER Physician stated he “would have ordered CT scan
if [he] knew patient had vomited”
EMTs were found to be negligent and liable for
wrongful death for FAILING to document
prehospital episodes of vomiting
Writing Styles
Divergent
– Takes into account all aspects of a complex
situation
Patient fell down a 30 foot embankment with multiple
injuries
Convergent
– Focus on the most important aspects of the
situation
Patient is apneic with a pulse
What about ALS calls?
Pre-Hospital Care Report Continuation
Form
– Anytime a medication is administered, the
Continuation Form should be used
– Controlled Substances require the use of the
Continuation Form
What about Albuterol and
Epinephrine?
EMTs may administer nebulized
Albuterol and Epinephrine via autoejector; the administration of these
drugs must be documented on the PCR
Patient-assisted medications (i.e.
nitroglycerin and/or bronchodilators) must
be documented on the PCR
NY State Trauma PCR
For all patients who’s
presenting complaint
is traumatic in nature,
regardless of severity
or cause, and
regardless of whether
or not the patient is
transported to a
trauma center.
(some still around…data points
captured in RescueNet
TabletPCR)
Yep…I’m braggin’ here !
Good documentation
may protect everyone
Poor documentation
protects no one
Which would you rather
have on the stand
with you?
What About Mistakes?
Change
on all copies
- strike with line and
initial
OR
Re-write and
destroy white and
pink copies; retain
yellow copy, void it
and submit to
Medical Control
Who should have access to
completed PCRs?
Agency officers
QA Committee
Training Coordinators
System/Service Medical Director
NY State EMS Representative
Other Agencies that participated on the call
Patients / Legal Guardians of Patients
Medical Record
As a Medical Record, PCRs should only be
released when presented with a:
– Subpoena
– Medical release form signed by the patient, guardian, or
estate (for legal purposes)
– When requested by a patient or legal guardian (routine
purposes)
– EMS Division QI follow-up request
Legal Record
As a Legal record, all PCRs should be
completed before :
* Copies are separated
* Leaving the receiving hospital
Lets Clear Up the RMA Issue
In the event that an ambulance is dispatched to call where both
individuals at the scene and EMS personnel believe that no injuries
exist and that there are no individuals requiring or requesting EMS
assistance, the appropriate PCR code 008 (gone on arrival) or 009
(unfounded) shall be used. An RMA signature is not required, but
may be obtained if desired. A PCR, however must be completed. A
physical assessment may be necessary to make a “no patient”
decision. Also, remember to consider High-Risk Criteria before
making a “no patient” found decision.
If in the judgment of EMS personnel there is a patient at the scene
who requires treatment and/or ambulance transport, but refuses,
Medical Control must be contacted in an attempt to convince the
patient to permit appropriate care.
Lets Clear Up the RMA Issue
In the event that a patient receives treatment, but refuses transport by
ambulance, and the EMS provider agrees that ambulance
transportation is not warranted, then medical control need not be
contacted. This becomes a “treat and release”, or a “refuses further
medical assistance.” This decision and any recommended follow-up
should be noted on the PCR and an RMA signature obtained.
In the event that the EMS provider believes that ambulance transport
is indicated, Medical Control must be contacted.
Review of High-Risk Criteria
Altered
Mental Status or suspected head injury
Glasgow Coma Scale less than 15
Less than 18 or older than 70
Neurological, cardiac, or respiratory signs and
symptoms
Abnormal vital signs
Alcohol or drug use
CO exposure
NO RADIO CONTACT FOR RMAs
Bottom Line
Very few situations turn out to be
“unfounded”
– If all parties neither require nor requested EMS
and there is no mechanism of injury
– Inadvertent personal / home medical alert alarms
There are no protocols or procedures in NY
State that allow for EMS provider-initiated
refusals
– Your duty to act begins when you accept the 911
call
Common Weaknesses
No record of patient status after treatment given
Focused assessment does not match presenting
problem
No Documentation for reasons something can’t be
done
Common Weaknesses
Pertinent negatives omitted
Incomplete physical examinations
Lack of Repeat Vital Signs, when indicated
Use of non-standard medical abbreviations
Some Beauties…
Spontaneous Idiopathic Fernoquadriplegia or
Spontaneous Idiopathic Strykerquadriplegia: The
condition in which the patient suddenly develops
total body paralysis while transferring them from
your Ferno or Stryker stretcher onto the hospital
bed (usually affects patients over 350 lbs).
Economically Challenged Urban Outdoorsman –
politically correct term for a homeless person
Gravity Storms – causes of a rash of falls and fallrelated injuries
More Beauties…
Anti-Gravity Storms - The cause of accidents with
ejections
NKDA – Not Known, Didn’t Ask
Vitals WNL – We Never Looked
TMB – Too Many Birthdays
ART – Assuming Room Temperature
CTD – Circling the Drain
Just Kidding!!!
Common Omissions
Date
Agency Code
Type of Alarm
Response Times
Presenting Problem
EMT Number
Location Code (Geocode)
SSN - Last 4 digits only vs
0000 or all 9 digits
Rejected PCRS
Will be returned to you
for completion
May inhibit your
QA/QI efforts
Increases liability
Agency does not
receive credit for
number of responses
Reduced future
delivery of PCRs
Karl’s Pet Peeves
“Sluggish
Pupils” (is that before or after algebra?)
Measuring the depth of lacerations (hopefully that
ruler is BBP compliant!)
Using the dispatch data as the chief complaint
(I didn’t think the person said “I’m having an MVA”)
The
term “neuro deficit” (were you able to measure that?)
The A&O x 3 scale (wasn’t that a Railroad in Monopoly?)
If you use a medical word - know what it means
and how to spell it (hey- Anna Falaxis, is that you?)
Yes, I actually saw these...
John Dow
Posed Dictal
Sinkable
Groinal Area
Consous
Reveils
Difrederick
Antiobiodack
Glue Coast
Please
help me...
Helpful Hints
Your PCR should be like a math problem…..
Subjective Interview
+
Objective Examination
=Treatment Plan
Prehospital
Impression
Interventions
Response
Helpful Hints
If you want to do it, and the patient doesn’t
let you - tell them why they need it, and what
may happen if you don’t do it - and
DOCUMENT IT AND GET A SIGNATURE
If the protocol calls for it and the patient
doesn’t want it - tell them why they need it,
and what may happen if you don’t do it - and
DOCUMENT IT AND GET A SIGNATURE
Helpful Hints
If the protocol says you need to do it and you can’t do it - DOCUMENT IT on
the PCR.
Supporting Documentation
Public Health Law Article 30
NYCRR Part 800.21
NY State EMS Policy Statement 02-05
Suffolk County Operations Policy 2-001
What about changes after the
PCR is submitted?
Complete an
addendum for the
original record
NEVER alter the
original service copy
Provide copy of
changes to hospital
and State for their
records
Let’s Look at a Few PCRs…
(The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly)
The Good…
The Ugly…
OK…What’s this HIPAA stuff
everyone’s talking about?
HIPAA and PCRs
Health Insurance Portability &
Accountability Act
– Enacted in 1996
– Full compliance by all health care entities
(can you say EMS?) REQUIRED by April
14, 2003
HIPAA and PCRs
Regulations affect ambulance and first
response services in three specific areas:
– PCR Retention Schedule
– Utilization of protected health information
as part of your agency’s QA/QI program
– Release of protected information your
agency collects on a PCR to a patient
PCR Retention Schedule
NYS-DOH Policy
Statement 02-05
– Keep white copy 6
years, or 3 years past
a patient’s 18th
birthday, whichever
is longer
SCEMS Policy
Statement 1-010 and
2-001
How Long Do We Keep
Them?
Must be kept in a
secure location
6 years (HIPAA)
3 years from the child’s
18th. Birthday, or 6
years, whichever is
longer
5 years if Controlled
Substances were used
PCRs and QA
EMS agencies are encouraged to use
PCRs as part of their QA/QI efforts
ALL personal indicators on the PCR
must be eliminated
“Blacked out” name, address, date of
birth and call location remains
acceptable when distributing copies to
QA Committee for review
Release of Information
Faxed copies OK;
must ensure
recipient received
Release form signed
by patient or by
attorney on behalf of
patient
– In person with ID
– Keep record of all
releases
PCRs may be
released to:
– NYS-DOH
employee as part of
inspection
– EMS Medical
Director or designee
– Countywide QI
process
– In response to Notice
of Claim
Where Can I Get Help?
New York State DOHBureau of EMS
– EMS Agency Operational
Resource Guide
Section 8 – Instruction
Manual for Prehospital
Care Report
Suffolk County EMS
Operations Manual
Any Questions ?