Title: Chapter 26 Documentation and Informatics
1Chapter 26Documentation and Informatics
2Confidentiality
- Nurses are legally and ethically obligated to
keep client information confidential. - Nurses are responsible for protecting records
from all unauthorized readers. - HIPAA act requires disclosure or requests
regarding health information.
3Standards
- The Joint Commission requires each client have an
assessment - Physical, psychosocial, environment, self-care,
client education, and discharge planning needs - Federal and state regulations, state statutes,
standards of care, and accreditation agencies set
nursing documentation standards.
4Multidisciplinary Communication Within the Health
Care Team
- Records or chart
- Confidential permanent legal document
- Reports
- Oral, written, audiotaped exchange of information
- Consultations
- A professional caregiver providing formal advice
to another caregiver - Referrals
- Arrangement for services by another care provider
5Purposes of Records
Communication Legal documentation
Financial billing Education
Research Auditing/monitoring
6Guidelines for Quality Documentation and Reporting
- Factual
- Accurate
- Complete
- Current
- Organized
7Methods of Recording
- Narrative
- The traditional method
- Problem-Oriented Medical Record (POMR)
- Database
- Problem list
- Nursing care plan
- Progress note
8Methods of Recording Progress Notes
- SOAP
- Subjective, objective, assessment, plan
- SOAPIE
- Subjective, objective, assessment, plan,
intervention, evaluation - PIE
- Problem, intervention, evaluation
- Focus Charting (DAR)
- Data, action, response
9Methods of Reporting
- Source records
- A separate section for each discipline
- Charting by exception (CBE)
- Focuses on documenting deviations
- Case management plan and critical pathways
- Incorporates a multidisciplinary approach to care
10Common Record-Keeping Forms
Admission nursing history form Flow sheets and graphic records
Client care summary or Kardex Acuity records
Standardized care plans Discharge summary form
11Home Care Documentation
- Medicare has specific guidelines for establishing
eligibility for home care. - Documentation is the quality control and
justification for reimbursement from Medicare,
Medicaid, or private insurance. - Nurses need to document all their services for
payment.
12Long-Term Health Care Documentation
- Governmental agencies are instrumental in
determining the standards and policies for
documentation. - The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987
includes Medicare and Medicaid legislation for
long-term care documentation. - The department of health in states governs the
frequency of written nursing records.
13Computerized Documentation
- Software programs allow nurses to enter
assessment data. - Computers generate nursing care plans and
document care. - A complete computer-based patient care record
(CPCR) is not without legal risks.
14Reporting
- Change of shift
- Telephone reports
- Verbal or telephone orders
- Transfer reports
- Incident reports