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Charting. Medical Careers Ms. Bystrom. The Medical Record (chart). Most important document kept in medical office Must be accurate & clearly written Legal document. Methods of Charting. Some MDs have assistant chart while they perform the exam Some MDs chart themselves
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Charting Medical Careers Ms. Bystrom
The Medical Record (chart) • Most important document kept in medical office • Must be accurate & clearly written • Legal document
Methods of Charting • Some MDs have assistant chart while they perform the exam • Some MDs chart themselves • Some dictate (record) information to be transcribed • Computer charting
Purpose of a Chart • Serves as a basis for planning patient care • documents evidence of the course of the evaluation, Tx and change in condition • documents communication between the MD and other healthcare professionals
Purpose of a Chart • Protects in legal issues involving the pt and MD • Establishes a database for use in continued education • Protects from loss of contract with insurance companies
Subjective & Objective notes • Subjective: Information supplied by the patient that the MD cannot see • Objective: Information provided by the physician that can be seen, heard, measured or felt.
Parts of a Chart • Administrative data • Insurance information • Correspondence • Referrals • Past medical records • Progress notes • Diagnostic information • Lab information • Medications
SOMR & POMR Two types of medical records are: • SOMR: Source-Oriented Medical Record • Chronological set of notes for each visit; most recent on top • POMR: Problem-Oriented Medical Record • List of problems on top, sections within the chart for each problem
SOAP Notes • A method of charting each visit the patient comes in for. • Subjective info • Objective info • Assessment (Dx) • Plan
Abbreviations • Shortened form of a word used to save time and space • Never make up abbreviations or use them if unsure • Some abbreviations have a completely different meaning if they are CAPITALIZED or lower case-use caution!
Correcting a Mistake while charting • Draw a single line through it • Write “error” above it • Write your initials & date • Never use white out or scribble out completely
First office contact • Telephone contact • Personal visit • Emergency visit
Forms in a Chart • Medical Hx Form • Pt information sheet • Chart note • Miscellaneous forms
Parts of a Medical Hx Form • Chief Complaint • Present illness • Past Hx • Family Hx • Social Hx • Review of systems
Completing a Medical Hx Form • Put pt at ease • Keep conversations on track • Be professional • Don’t pry for information from a difficult pt • Address sensitive topics last • Ensure pt privacy • Update forms as needed for established pts
Patient information sheet • Contains: • Personal information (non-medical) • Patient demographics (age, sex, race) • Insurance/billing information
Chart note • Completed at each visit for current chief complaint • Includes SOAP
Chief Complaint • A chief complaint (CC) is the specific reason why the patient came to see the doctor that day. • The CC should be short but detailed. Use abbreviations and medical terms when possible.
Characteristics of a Chief Complaint • Location • Radiation • Quality • Severity • Associated symptoms • Aggravating factors • Alleviating factors • Setting and timing
Rules of Charting • Use black ink • After charting draw a line to the end and initial and abbreviate your title. • Do not leave spaces between chart note and initials. • Do not use ditto marks • Do not erase, scribble out or white out any mistakes
Rules of Charting cont… • Do not leave spaces between each chart note • Use standard abbreviations only • Use correct grammar and spelling • Write patients name and DOB on each page • NEVER chart for another person
Rules of Charting cont… • Do NOT diagnose! • Date every visit • Be specific