Documentation
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Documentation
Documentation
Nurses are legally and ethically bound to keep
patient information confidential
Nurses must work to protect patient records
from unauthorized readers
Documentation is required by the ANA
standards for practice and nurse practice acts
in all states
Nursing charting is used for:
Communication of patient
needs/progress/therapy between healthcare
providers
Financial billing
Chart reviews by researchers, accreditation
agencies, and lawyers in event of malpractice
suits
Charting guidelines
Be sure to review chart p. 480
Do not use White-Out on any patient charts or
records
Anyone reading the chart afterward may wonder
what you are trying to cover up
Altering patient charts is a criminal offense
Document times accurately
Malpractice suits have been won due to
inaccuracies in documentation about when care
was delivered
Do not use abbreviations that are not accepted
by the facility
Charting guidelines
Only enter factual information, not opinions
like:
“The patient was very cranky today”
“The patient’s wound stunk really bad”
“The patient had a good day today”
“Patient appeared more whiny today”
If you make a mistake, draw a single line
through it, write “error” and sign your name
afterward
Always include the date and time with each
entry with your signature and credentials
(OUSN, RN)
Charting
Focus of charting will reflect specialty areas of
care. For instance:
Rehab: patient mobility, continence, compliance
with therapy
Critical care: monitors, lines, ventilator settings
Labor & delivery: dilation of cervix, fetal heart
rate, pain management
Specialty areas will often have specific flow
sheets for charting as well as blank areas for
narrative charting as well
Watch your handwriting!
Even though doctors’ handwriting is a running
joke, it is very important that your charting is
legible!
Illegible entries can be misinterpreted- not
good if the charting is used in a malpractice
lawsuit
Only black ink is acceptable!
Do not leave any blank spaces in the chartsomeone may come later and add information
in your notes
Charting
Old saying:
“If it wasn’t charted, it wasn’t done!”
Important for billing and if chart is ever called
into evidence in a lawsuit
Hospitals are now facing huge fines for fraudbilling for procedures/treatments that were not
done
If information is not recorded, it is not
available for other members of the healthcare
team caring for the patient
Charting
Must be current and up to date
Best to chart when assessment is done or care
is delivered, not at the end of the shift
Frequency depends on unit and care:
Code blue: may chart every minute
Nursing home: may be daily or weekly
Do not repeat medical diagnoses from the
patient’s chart or normal findings from the
physical assessment flow sheet
Charting
If you chart about a problem, chart what you
did about it
“Patient complained of severe incisional painmorphine 10 mg given with relief stated
afterward”
Charting style varies by facility
Narrative notes
Flow charts
Computer entry
Do not chart ahead of time- patients refuse
treatments/medications all the time!
Charting
If you do a procedure on another nurse’s
patient, chart on that patient’s chart- include
the appropriate information and sign your
name
DO NOT chart on procedures that you did not
do
If another nurse does a procedure on your
patient, chart as such:
“18 French Foley catheter inserted by S.
O’Meara RN, patent with clear yellow urine”
Shift report
At the end of each shift, nurses give report
about their patients to the on-coming nurse
May be given face-to-face, written down, or on
audiotapes
Purpose is to provide continuity of care
Important information is relayed so that nurses
can provide appropriate care
Shift report
Must be done quickly and efficiently
Should include:
Background information (admitting
diagnosis, physician, room number)
Assessment findings and lab values
Treatments and patient education
Family information
Priority needs
Discharge planning
Telephone reports
Should be documented when significant
events or changes in a patient’s condition
have occurred
Documenting phone calls:
When call was made
Who made call and who was called
Who the information was given to
What information was given
What information was received
If no order was received from the physician,
document as such
Telephone & verbal orders
Physicians may give orders over the phone to
an RN
Order needs to be verified by repeating it
clearly to the physician
RN is responsible for writing the order in the
patient’s record
Telephone orders may only be given to RNs,
not LPNs
Telephone orders may not be left with unit
secretaries or on voice mail
Incidents
An incident is any event that is not consistent
with the routine care for a patient or nursing
unit
Examples of incidents:
Malfunctioning patient equipment
Patient falls or injuries
Needlestick injuries
Medication errors
Incident reports
Should be filled out for any kind of incident
that occurs
If in doubt, ask nursing supervisor
Specific reports may be needed for some
incidents such as:
adverse medication effects
medication injuries
needlestick injuries
patient falls
Are filled out in addition to any appropriate
entries that are made in the patient’s chart
regarding the incident
Incident reports
DO NOT chart in the narrative/ patient’s chart
that an incident report was filled out:
Incident reports are for internal investigations
within the facility only, and are reviewed by
facility supervisors and managers
If the presence of an incident report is included
in the patient’s chart, it may be subpoenaed as
evidence in a malpractice lawsuit