The Medical Record

Chapter 2


The Medical Record






The medical record, whether paper or electronic, is a legal document that chronicles a patient’s clinical course during hospitalization and is the primary means of communication between the various clinicians caring for a single patient. More specifically, the medical record contains information about past or present symptoms and disease(s), test and examination results, interventions, and the medical-surgical outcome.1 Additionally, the medical record may be used for educational purposes and for performing quality improvement studies, conducting research, and resolving legal issues such as competency or disability.2


The widespread use of electronic health records (EHR) has been promoted by the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, which consists of three-stage criteria, including financial incentives for hospitals to comply with an EHR. Stage 1 calls for EHR compliance by the end of 2014, with penalties for those institutions or providers not in compliance.3 Stages 2 and 3 are yet to be specifically defined. In conjunction with the transition to EHR, an initiative known as “meaningful use” has been developed to ensure providers are able to enhance the quality of patient care with the implementation of EHR.4


Specific advantages of an EHR compared with a paper record include complete and accurate patient health data that is readily available and shared with multiple providers to improve care coordination, the convenience of electronic prescriptions, the ability to track quality data, patient empowerment (by giving them access to their own records), and the potential for improved automatic patient follow-up.5



Confidentiality


According to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Rule, any information in the medical record that contains “protected health information (PHI)” should be kept confidential, and all health care providers should safeguard the availability and integrity of health care information in oral, written, or electronic forms.6 PHI includes any information that pertains to the past, present, or future physical or mental health conditions of an individual, including provision of care, payment of care, and demographics.7 A subset of the Privacy Rule is the Security Rule, which specifically addresses the confidentiality of electronic PHI (e-PHI). The Security Rule states that a covered entity must ensure the integrity and availability of e-PHI that it creates, maintains, or transmits.8 The goal of the Security Rule is to protect e-PHI as institutions such as hospitals adopt new and efficient technologies.8 Specific topics, such as human immunodeficiency virus status, substance abuse, domestic abuse, or psychiatric history, are privileged information, and discussion of them is subject to additional ethical and regulatory guidelines.9


The physical therapist must be compliant with HIPAA,10 the American Physical Therapy Association’s Guide for Professional Conduct and Code of Ethics for Physical Therapists,11,11a and any policies and procedures of the facility or state in regard to sharing medical record information with the patient, family, caretakers, visitors, or third parties.




Physical Therapist Documentation


The physical therapist should comply with the documentation standards including, but not limited to, the policies/procedures of the organization, the state, and the American Physical Therapy Association’s Guidelines for Physical Therapy Documentation of Patient/Client Management.12


In general, documentation must be:



Documentation should be free of ambiguous acronyms or abbreviations to minimize misinterpretation and prevent errors that could result in patient safety issues (Table 2-1).13



TABLE 2-1


Prohibitive Abbreviations*



























Do Not Use Potential Problem Use Instead
U, u (unit) Mistaken for “0” (zero), the number”4” (four) or “cc” Write “unit”
IU (International Unit) Mistaken for IV (intravenous) or the number 10 (ten) Write “International Unit”
Q.D, QD, q.d., qd (daily)
QOD., QOD, q.o.d., qod (every other day)
Mistaken for each other
Period after Q mistaken for “I” and the “O” mistaken for the “I”
Write “daily”
Write “every other day”
Trailing zero (X.0 mg)
Lack of trailing zero (.X mg)
Decimal point is missed Write X mg
Write 0.X mg
MS
MSO4 and MgSO4
Can mean morphine sulfate or magnesium sulfate
Confused for one another
Write “morphine sulfate”
Write “magnesium sulfate”

*Applies to all orders and all medication-related documentation that is handwritten (including free-text computer entry) or on preprinted forms.


Exception: A “trailing zero” may be used only where required to demonstrate the level of precision of the value being reported, such as for laboratory results, imaging studies that report size of lesions, or catheter/tube sizes. It may not be used in medication orders or other medication-related documentation.


Data from The Joint Commission Official “Do Not Use “ List. www.jointcommission.org. Last accessed June 9, 2012.

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Jul 12, 2016 | Posted by in MANUAL THERAPIST | Comments Off on The Medical Record

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