TLO 4.1a Documentation Flashcards

1
Q

Healthcare members use health records to?

A
Communicate
Legal documentation of care provided
Continuity of care
Quality improvement
Reimbursement
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2
Q

Why computer charting?

A

Keeps all records in one place
Decreases incidences of lost information
Enhances communications
Electronic Health Record (EHR): all inclusive of all visits (lifelong)
Electronic Medical Record (EMR): legal record that describes a single encounter or visit

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3
Q

Computer charting objectives?

A

Provide a lifetime patient record
includes problem list
Supports direct entry of patient data by physician
Support confidentially
Provide continuous access to multiple users at same time
Measures costs and quality of care
Flexible and expandable to meet needs of organization

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4
Q

Electronic Health Record
Contains?
Benefits?

A

Computerized health record
Contain interdisciplinary notes, labs, clinical documentation, diagnoses, etc.

Benefits:
improved access to information
can be accessed remotely
info stored and retrieved quickly
nurses spend 25% less time documenting
aggregated data reports can be generated quickly
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5
Q

When/What to document?

A

Begins at the beginning of shift initial assessment
Chart as soon as possible after you give care or make an observation
Chronologically to communicate change in status or interventions, teaching, consents, contacting provider, AMA etc
Never chart ahead
you will sign your name electronically or written:
ex: J. Trethewey SN, MCC

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6
Q

Legal guidelines for documentation?

A

Use black ink
Write legibly/type if EHR
Do not leave blanks lines in narrative notes, draw line after
Use only agency approved abbreviations
Maintain confidentiality
Sign all charting with name and credentials
No scratch outs or erasures
No biased statements, just the facts
Chart for yourself do your own assessments
Chart actual time

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7
Q

Legal guidelines: Malpractice?

A
Failure to record:
pertinent health or drug information
nursing actions
medication administration
drug reaction or change in patient condition

Incomplete or illegible records
Failure to document discontinued medications

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8
Q

Documentation formats?

A

SOAPIE
PIE
DAR

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9
Q

What is SOAPIE?

A
Subjective
Objective
Assessment
Plan
Intervention
Evaluation
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10
Q

What is PIE?

A

Problem
Intervention
Evaluation

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11
Q

What is DAR?

A

Data
Action
Response

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12
Q

Charting by Exception?

A

Patient meets all standards, unless otherwise documented “within defined limits” (WDL)
EPIC
Uses flow sheets
Emphasis on abnormal findings

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13
Q

Charting by exception
ADVANTAGES?
DISADVANTAGES?

A

Advantage:
reduces documentation time
eliminates redundancy documents abnormal findings

Disadvantage:
omissions of main pt problem r/t disagreement on problem or variation

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14
Q

Change of shift reporting may be given?

A

Orally
Taped
Face to face
Bedside report

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15
Q

Change in shift reports include?

A
Name, age, room number
Allergies, code status
Admit reason
Pertinent medical history
Abnormal assessment finding in each body system
Pain and pain medications
Diet, how tolerated, blood glucose
IV sites
IV meds and rates
Ambulation, fall risk
Height/weight
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