Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - (Page 13) inwhole as a way of tracking the process of care not just for an individual patient, but for groups of patients in the form of benchmarking and clinical research. GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF DOCUMENTATION This brief article cannot serve as an exhaustive resource on the legal or medical aspects of documentation. However, there are some basic principles.The medical record should be complete and legible. The documentation of each patient encounter should include the reason for the encounter and relevant history, physical examination findings and test results, assessment, clinical impression or diagnosis, plan for care, and date and legible identity of the observer. The patient's progress, as well as response to and changes in treatment must be documented. The billing codes reported on the health insurance claim form should be supported by the documentation in the medical record. Accepted methods for correcting errors and amending records should be used. While signatures are handwritten in paper documents, electronic records now support electronic signatures which append a statement such as electronically signed by after the clinician enters an assigned security code. Ethical principles pertaining to medical records are available from The American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA). Conduct which is not acceptable includes allowing patterns of retrospective documentation to increase reimbursement, misusing sensitive data or violating the privacy of an individual. Documentation: The 30,000-Foot View Caroline Fife, MD, FAAFP, CWS D ocumentation is an intrinsic component of every patient encounter.The financial success of a facility depends upon the completeness of the process. The major factor affecting the quality of an organization’s data (and therefore its revenue stream) is the accuracy of documentation. If you are not already convinced of the importance of accuracy in documentation, a study by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) found that of all of the improper Medicare benefit payments made during 2001, 43% were due to documentation errors. It is well known that patient quality of care is also related to quality of documentation. Furthermore, documentation is essential to meet the changing demands of regulatory bodies such as the The Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO), the Office of the Inspector General (OIG), and CMS. THE WHAT AND WHY OF THE MEDICAL RECORD In the 19th century, the medical record was a sort of personalized lab notebook in which clinicians recorded their observations. In the 21st century, the medical record has many functions, including, serving as a basis for planning and documenting patient care, communicating among numerous health professionals, and protecting the legal interests of the patient and healthcare providers. The medical record may supply information for internal hospital auditing and quality assurance, documenting compliance with governmental regulations, and provide data for medical research. It is also a means of determining the billed revenue for physicians and hospitals. Thus, documentation must validate the medical necessity and appropriateness of the diagnostic and/or therapeutic services provided. What is more interesting about today’s medical records is that they serve PHYSICIAN DOCUMENTATION Evaluation and Management codes (E/M codes) used for physician billing are copyrighted and maintained by the American Medical Association. The payment system uses two sets of codes: ICD9 is used to identify the patient’s pathology (diagnosis) and support medical necessity; the Common Procedural Terminology (CPT) is used to code the physician’s treatment of Today’s Wound Clinic Spring 2008 13
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 Contents InTroduction InBusiness Documentation: The 30,000-Foot View Documentation: Clearing Up the Role of Compliance InTech InPhotography InFluence InStruction InNews InCentive Ad Index Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 (Page Cover1) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 (Page Cover2) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 (Page 1) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Contents (Page 2) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTroduction (Page 4) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTroduction (Page 5) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTroduction (Page 6) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTroduction (Page 7) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InBusiness (Page 8) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InBusiness (Page 9) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InBusiness (Page 10) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InBusiness (Page 11) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InBusiness (Page 12) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Documentation: The 30,000-Foot View (Page 13) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Documentation: The 30,000-Foot View (Page 14) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Documentation: The 30,000-Foot View (Page 15) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Documentation: Clearing Up the Role of Compliance (Page 16) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Documentation: Clearing Up the Role of Compliance (Page 17) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Documentation: Clearing Up the Role of Compliance (Page 18) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Documentation: Clearing Up the Role of Compliance (Page 19) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Documentation: Clearing Up the Role of Compliance (Page 20) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 21) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 22) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 23) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 24) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 25) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 26) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 27) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 28) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InTech (Page 29) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InPhotography (Page 30) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InPhotography (Page 31) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InPhotography (Page 32) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InPhotography (Page 33) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InPhotography (Page 34) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InFluence (Page 35) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InFluence (Page 36) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InFluence (Page 37) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InStruction (Page 38) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InStruction (Page 39) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InStruction (Page 40) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InStruction (Page 41) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InStruction (Page 42) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InNews (Page 43) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InNews (Page 44) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InCentive (Page 45) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InCentive (Page 46) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - InCentive (Page 47) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Ad Index (Page 48) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Ad Index (Page Cover3) Today's Wound Clinic - Spring 2008 - Ad Index (Page Cover4)
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