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Chapter 17 Documenting, Reporting, Conferring, and Using Informatics

Chapter 17 Documenting, Reporting, Conferring, and Using Informatics. Characteristics of Effective Documentation. Consistent with professional and agency standards Complete Accurate Concise Factual Organized and timely Legally prudent Confidential.

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Chapter 17 Documenting, Reporting, Conferring, and Using Informatics

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  1. Chapter 17Documenting, Reporting, Conferring, and Using Informatics

  2. Characteristics of Effective Documentation • Consistent with professional and agency standards • Complete • Accurate • Concise • Factual • Organized and timely • Legally prudent • Confidential

  3. Using the 24-hr Cycle Military Clock for Documenting Times

  4. What Is Confidential? • All information about patients written on paper, spoken aloud, saved on computer • Name, address, phone, fax, social security • Reason the person is sick • Treatments patient receives • Information about past health conditions

  5. Potential Breaches in Patient Confidentiality • Displaying information on a public screen • Sending confidential e-mail messages via public networks • Sharing printers among units with differing functions • Discarding copies of patient information in trash cans • Holding conversations that can be overheard • Faxing confidential information to unauthorized persons • Sending confidential messages overheard on pagers

  6. Patient Rights • See and copy their health record • Update their health record • Get a list of disclosures • Request a restriction on certain uses or disclosures • Choose how to receive health information

  7. Policy for Receiving Verbal Orders in an Emergency • Record the orders in patient’s medical record. • Read back the order to verify accuracy. • Date and note the time orders were issued in emergency. • Record VO, the name of the physician followed by nurse’s name and initials.

  8. Policy for Physician Review of Verbal Orders • Review orders for accuracy. • Sign orders with name, title, and pager number. • Date and note time orders signed.

  9. Duties of RN Receiving a Telephone Order • Record the orders in patient’s medical record. • Read orders back to practitioner to verify accuracy. • Date and note the time orders were issued. • Record TO, full name and title of physician or nurse practitioner who issued orders. • Sign the orders with name and title.

  10. Question Tell whether the following statement is true or false. One of the purposes of creating a patient record is to evaluate the quality of care patients have received and the competence of the nurses providing that care. A. True B. False

  11. Answer Answer: A. True One of the purposes of creating a patient record is to evaluate the quality of care patients have received and the competence of the nurses providing that care.

  12. Purposes of Patient Records • Communication with other healthcare professionals • Record of diagnostic and therapeutic orders • Care planning • Quality of care reviewing • Research • Decision analysis • Education • Legal and historical documentation • Reimbursement

  13. Purposes of Recording Data • Facilitate patient care. • Serve as a financial and legal record. • Help in clinical research. • Support decision analysis.

  14. Methods of Documentation • Source-oriented records • Problem-oriented medical records • PIE charting • Focus charting • Charting by exception • Case management model • Computerized documentation • Electronic medical records (EMRs)

  15. Question Which of the following methods of documentation is unique in that it does not develop a separate plan of care but instead incorporates the plan of care into the progress notes? A. Source-oriented records B. Problem-oriented records C. PIE (problem, intervention, evaluation) D. Focus charting

  16. Answer Answer: C. PIE (problem, intervention, evaluation) Rationale: PIE charting incorporates the plan of care into progress notes in which problems are identified by number. In source-oriented records, each healthcare group keeps data on its own separate form. Problem-oriented records are organized around patient problems rather than around sources of information. Focus charting brings the focus of care back to the patient and the patient’s concerns.

  17. Sample PIE Patient Care Note

  18. Sample Focus Patient Care Notes

  19. Case Management Models • Collaborative pathways • Variance charting

  20. Major Components of POMR • Defined database • Problem list • Care plans • Progress notes

  21. Formats for Nursing Documentation • Initial nursing assessment • Kardex and patient care summary • Plan of nursing care • Critical collaborative pathways • Progress notes • Flow sheets • Discharge and transfer summary • Home healthcare documentation • Long-term care documentation

  22. Types of Flow Sheets • Graphic record • 24-hour fluid balance record • Medication record • 24-hour patient care records and acuity charting forms

  23. Question PIE notes, SOAP notes, focus charting, and charting by exception are examples of which of the following formats for nursing documentation? A. Critical/collaborative pathways B. Progress notes C. Flow sheets D. Discharge summary

  24. Answer Answer: B. Progress notes Rationale: Progress notes inform caregivers of the progress a patient is making using the specified formats. Critical/collaborative pathways are standardized plans of care developed for a patient with designated diagnoses. Flow sheets are documentation tools included in the progress notes that record routine aspects of care. Discharge summaries are clinical reports written to summarize the patient record.

  25. Medicare Requirements for Home Healthcare • Patient is homebound and still needs skilled nursing care. • Rehabilitation potential is good (or patient is dying). • The patient’s status is not stabilized. • The patient is making progress in expected outcomes of care.

  26. Four Basic Components of RAI (Resident Assessment Tool) • Minimum data set • Triggers • Resident assessment protocols • Utilization guidelines

  27. Benefits of RAI • Residents respond to individualized care. • Staff communication becomes more effective. • Resident and family involvement increases. • Documentation becomes clearer.

  28. Change of Shift Report • Basic identifying information about each patient • Current appraisal of each patient’s health status • Changes in medical conditions and patient response to therapy • Where patient stands in relation to identified diagnoses and goals • Current orders (nurse and physician) and unfilled orders • Summary of each newly admitted patient • Report on patient transferred or discharged

  29. Two Nurses Confer at Change of Shift Report

  30. Methods of Reporting • Face-to-face meetings • Telephone conversations • Written messages • Audio-taped messages • Computer messages

  31. Conferring About Care • Consultations and referrals • Nursing and interdisciplinary team care conferences • Nursing care rounds

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