Final Doc Handout for Residents
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Transcript Final Doc Handout for Residents
Medical Documentation
Avni Bhalakia, M.D.
St. Barnabas Hospital
July 29, 2009
Objectives
Purpose of the Medical Record
Importance of Documentation
HOW TO Document
WHAT TO Document
Medical Student Documentation
Inpatient Documents
Medication Reconciliation
Summary
The Medical Record
As defined by the AHIMA (American Health
Information Management Association)
Record of the patient’s health history
Care provided
Evidence that the care was necessary
Patient’s response to care
Standards of care delivered
Method of communication among practitioners
Supporting documentation for reimbursement
www.ahima.org
The Medical Record
As outlined by Medicaid
Chronological record of pertinent facts, findings, and
observations about an individual's health history
Means to:
Evaluate and plan for patient’s care
Monitor patient’s health over time
Communicate with others involved in the care
Review claims and payment (reimbursement)
Review quality of care
Collect data for research and education
May serve as a legal document
Medicaid, Documentation Guidelines for E/M Services, 1997
Documentation in the Medical Record
Documentation is a big failure in most
institutions and practices
Documentation should be a means to
justify decisions more than to recall events
Good documentation enhances
communication among physicians
Medical Records are a “running dialogue between
involved clinicians on the patient’s management
and progress” (Panting, Postgrad Med J, 2004))
Physician Documentation Expert Panel Ontario, 2006
Importance of Documentation
Patient Care & Safety
Legal Implications
Financial Implications
Documentation Impacts Patient Safety
Improper documentation can lead to errors
in patient care & jeopardize patient safety
Medical Errors
20% of patients will have an adverse outcome in
first several weeks after discharge
1/3 of those errors were preventable
Physician Documentation Expert Panel Ontario, 2006
Patient Safety
1999, Institute of Medicine
44,000-98,000 people die in hospitals each year
because of preventable medical errors
Estimated cost between $17-29 billion per year in
hospitals nationwide
Includes the expense of additional care
necessitated by the errors, lost income and
household productivity, and disability
Movement began for patient safety goals
Joint Commission, Hospital administration
Institute of Medicine, 1999
Legal Impact of Documentation
Improper documentation can cause trouble for the
healthcare worker
Joint Commission (loss of hospital accreditation)
Lawsuits and loss of professional standing, job &
savings
“Clinical negligence cases are won on the evidence”
If not documented completely, failing memories may
lead to an inability to rebut the claim
Panting, Postgrad Med J, 2004
Financial Impact of Documentation
Insurance companies have standards that
must be complied with to be paid
Reimbursed for the work that is documented
Inadequate documentation can lead to
improper allocation of resources
E.g. Hospital loses accreditation and funding
decreases
The Barriers to Good Documentation
Redundant information
Writing the same thing in multiple places
Time constraint
Legibility (Hand Written Chart)
Inaccurate problems & plan/ status not
updated (EMR)
Physician Documentation Expert Panel Ontario, 2006
Medical Documentation
HOW & WHAT TO DOCUMENT
Know that there is a standard for what is
acceptable documentation
Must know the standards for all the
reasons we just mentioned
HOW TO Document
Document in Black pen
Never use blue pen
Never use pencil
Do not leave spaces between entries to
allow for chronological order
Deletions or Alterations
Should be crossed out with a single line and
co-signed/initialed
Never use white out
HOW TO Document
Every entry should be signed by the author
with legible print of name & title below
signature or stamp
Includes Medical Students
Resident physicians must co-sign student
notes
Addend what is incorrect or different to their
note as now you are signing your name!
HOW TO Document
Be specific, objective, and complete
Write legibly
Avoid abbreviations
When in doubt, write it out
DO NOT USE abbreviations
It is illegal and unethical to pre-time/date
or back-time/date an entry in the chart
Add an addendum
WHAT TO Document
Each entry in the chart must have
Patient label on every page
Date (month, date, and year)
Time of entry
Title of entry (e.g. PGY-2 Addendum, Daily
Progress Note)
Signature and authentication (stamp)
WHAT TO Document
Informed consent, risks and benefits
explained
Incidents
Attempts at & communications with family
members
Communications with primary care
physicians & consulting services
WHAT TO Document
Events
Change in clinical status, intervention, and
outcome
E.g. Patient became hypoxic, portable CXR done and shows
RML pneumonia. Antibiotics added. Patient is currently
comfortable on 1L NC, sats>98%, RR 18.
Significant change in plan
E.g. Patient was not discharged today as planned because the
blood culture grew positive at 36 hours. A repeat culture was
drawn and antibiotics were continued. Patient remains afebrile
and well-appearing. Anticipate ID of organism tomorrow and
possible discharge if it’s a contaminant species.
DO NOT Document
False information
E.g. Part of the exam you did not perform
Personal opinions or judgments
Be objective
Medical Student Documentation
Review the students’ notes
Co-sign the note and add an addendum
Sign and stamp below addendum
ALL student notes should be co-signed
Residents’ responsibility that the student
documentation is complete and accurate
Should uphold all documentation standards
Good Documentation
Promotes good physician-to-physician
communication
Helps prevent medical errors
Enhances patient care
Has legal and financial impacts
Documents of the Inpatient Unit
Admission Note (H&P)
Progress Note
Discharge Summary & Patient Plan
Physician Orders
Must Have on EVERY Document
Patient label on every page
Time & Date all entries
Sign & Stamp all entries
Patient Label on EVERY page in chart
Admission Note (H&P)
Patient Label
Time & Date
PMD & phone number
Chief complaint
History of Present Illness
Past Medical History
Birth History
Immunizations
Home Medications
Dose, Route,
Frequency, Last dose
Allergies
Dietary History
Developmental History
Family History
Social History
Review of Systems
ER course
Exam on Pediatric Unit
Assessment
Plan
Growth charts (including
BMI)
Sign & Stamp
Example: Home Medications
Write “unknown” or “unable to obtain.” Do not leave blank.
Progress Note
• Means of
communication
between care
providers
• Convey thought
process of decision
making and plans Date & Time
Patient Label
Note Title (e.g. PGY1 Progress Note,
Addendum, Event Note, etc)
Write
Legibly
• Record of events
Sign & Stamp
Discharge Summary
Summarizes the hospital course
Brief & complete account of what happened
during admission, problems and new findings,
intervention, outcome, and follow-up
Means to communicate with the primary
care physician and help with transfer of
care and follow-up needed
Include the basics: patient label, date, time,
signature, and stamp
PMD rated D/C summaries as useful
IF concise, complete & included:
Admitting diagnosis
Relevant physical findings and labs
Brief account of procedures and/or complications
during admission
Discharge diagnosis
Discharge meds & planned length of treatment
Active problems at discharge
Arrangements for follow up
Physician Documentation Expert Panel Ontario, 2006
Discharge Summary
A summary of hospitalization to the primary
care physician
HPI
Do not need to rewrite entire H&P
List pertinent positives and negatives on physical
exam and lab values
Hospital Course & Treatment
Appropriate details with conciseness
Discharge Summary
Hospital Course & Treatment
List hospital course by problem or organ
system
Report interventions, rationale, outcomes
Report remarkable events and complications
Date important events
E.g. Patient had surgery on 7/5/2008 vs.
Patient had surgery on hospital day #32
Discharge Summary
Hospital Course & Treatment
Report remarkable labs and physical findings
Avoid a laundry list of lab values; say what is
pertinent
E.g. CXR was unremarkable, serum chemistry
unremarkable except for glucose of 58
Include lab values & data pertinent to follow up
E.g. discharge weight in FTT patients, HgbA1C in diabetic
patients, Range of documented blood pressure in patient
with noted hypertension in the hospital
Discharge Summary
Patient condition upon discharge: stable
Discharge diagnosis (not a symptom)
Discharge medications
Length of therapy
Reconcile with admission H&P and hospital medications
Discharge instructions: be specific
Pending labs
Follow-up appointments
Date, time, location, & phone number
Example
“he appeared to have pneumonia
at the time of admission so we
empirically covered him for
community-acquired pneumonia
with ceftriaxone and
azithromycin until day 2 when
his blood cultures grew out strep
pneumoniae that was pan
sensitive so we stopped the
ceftriaxone and completed a 5
day course of azithromycin. But
on day 4 he developed diarrhea
so we added flagyl to cover for
c.diff, which did come back
positive on day 6 so he needs 3
more days of that…”
“Completed 5 day course of
azithromycin for pan sensitive
strep pneumoniae pneumonia
complicated by c.diff colitis.
Currently on day 7/10 of flagyl
and c.diff negative on 9/21”
Department of Medicine, University of Florida
Patient Plan for Post-Hospital Care
Patient label, date, time
Discharge diagnosis
Discharge teaching: special instructions
Write when patient should return to ER or to see their
physician
Discharge medications
Reconcile with H&P and hospitalization
Write instructions using language that the patient to
understand
E.g. Twice a day (not BID)
Follow up
Clinic name, address, date, time, and phone number
Patient plan
at discharge
Complete all sections of
document
Write n/a or Ø if not
relevant
Write for the patient to
understand
Normal vital signs at
discharge
Be specific with follow-up
appointment information
Physician Orders
Care plan for hospital admission that
includes
Nursing care: vitals, ins/outs, special
instructions
Medications Pharmacy
Circumstances to notify physician
Physician Orders
The Basics
Patient label
Diagnosis,
allergies, &
weight
Date & time
order
Signature &
stamp
Physician Orders
DO NOT use abbreviations
Write legibly
If an order needs to be changed, cross out
the order & re-write it to avoid errors
Official “Do Not Use” List by
Joint Commission
DO NOT USE
USE INSTEAD
QD or Q.D.
Every day or daily
QOD
Every other day
U
Units
IU
International Units
MgSO4
Magnesium Sulfate
MS or MSO4
Morphine Sulfate
Trailing zero (X.0 mg)
Write “X mg”
Lack of leading zero (0.X mg)
Write “0.X mg”
The Joint Commission, May 2005
Other “Do Not Use” Abbreviations
DO NOT USE
USE INSTEAD
µg
Mcg or micrograms
BT
Bedtime or QHS
SS
Sliding Scale
CC
Cubic Centimeter
>
Write “greater than”
<
Write “less than”
The Joint Commission, May 2005
Note when Writing Medication Orders
Write medications in mg/kg/dose or day
Nursing and Pharmacy should not accept orders
without this
SBH Med dosing
Daily = 9 am (NOT Q24 hrs)
BID = 9 am, 5 pm (NOT Q12 hrs)
TID = 9 am, 1 pm, 5 pm (NOT Q8 hrs)
SBH Pharmacy requires insulin units be written
out in numeric form
E.g. Humalog 5 (five) units SQ injection
Medication Reconciliation
Generates an accurate and complete
medication list
Reduces
Inadvertent omission of home meds
Number of adverse medication events
Failure of restarting home meds
Errors associated with doses or dosage forms
Medication Reconciliation
Obtain medication history on admission
Record current medications on H&P form
Use medication list while writing orders
Reconcile orders with med list during admission,
transfer, post-op care, and discharge
Communicate list of meds to next health care
provider
Summary
Documentation is important for provider
communication and patient safety
Medical Record serves as a legal record of
the patient’s care
Adhere to standards in documentation
Write legibly
Know which abbreviations are acceptable
Reconcile home medications
References
Altman, D. et al. Improving Patient Safety—Five Years after the IOM Report.
NEJM 2004; 351(20): 2041-43.
American Health Information Management Association. Long Term Care Health
Information Practice and Documentation Guidelines, www.ahima.org, Sept 2001,
downloaded on December 2, 2008.
Department of Internal Medicine, Oklahoma University. Discharge Summary
Guidelines. http://tulsa.ou.edu/im/Discharge%20 Summary%20Guide.pdf,
downloaded on December 4, 2008
Institute of Medicine. To Err is Human. Nov 1999.
Panting, G., MD. How to avoid being sued in clinical practice. Postgrad Med J
2004; 80:165-168.
Physician Documentation Expert Panel Ontario. A Guide to Better Physician
Documentation, November 2006.
Ross, Martie, Esq. Ten Commandments of Medical Record Documentation.
www.lathrophealthlawyers.com, downloaded on December 2, 2008.
University of Florida, Department of Medicine, Medical Clerkship, 4th year
medical student information. http://www.medicine.ufl.edu/
3rd_year_clerkship/documents/Discharge%20Summary.pdf, downloaded on
December 12, 2008.