Documentation types
Nursing Documenting format
MISC.
MISC 2
Guidelines for Documenting
100

Purposes of nursing documentation

What are:

 Communication among health professionals across the continuum of care

  Record of patient care

  Reflection of Nursing Practice Standards

  Legal documentation

  Audits

  Education of health professionals

  Financial/reimbursement

  Research

  


100

Narrative format

Tells the story of the client’s experience in a chronological format. Client status, activities, and response to treatment may all be included in narrative charting.

100

Paper documentation types

Nursing admission data forms, discharge summaries, nurses’ notes, flow sheets, graphic records, checklists, intake and output records, medication administration records, Kardexes® or patient care summaries, integrated plans of care (IPOCs), and occurrence reports.

100

Types of hand-off reports

Bedside

Face-to-face

recording

SBAR

PACE (Patient/Problem, Assessment/Actions, Continuing/Changes, and Evaluation)

100

What should you do if you forget to make an important entry?

Add entry and mark as "late entry"

Notify nurse manager

Follow agency's policy
200

PIE Format

Is organized according to problem, interventions, and evaluation. Problems are identified at the admission assessment. Subsequent entries begin with identification of the problem number. This type of charting establishes an on going care plan.

200

Which documentation forms are not part of patient record.

Occurrence forms and the Kardexes. They are used to document unusual events(occurrence forms) or to summarize care (Kardexes) but not included in pt record.

200

Included in a hand-off report

• Client’s name, age, and room number

• Client’s admitting diagnosis (one or several may exist)

• Client’s relevant past medical history

• Treatments the client has received at this admission(surgery, line placements, breathing treatments)

• Upcoming diagnostics, surgeries, or treatments

• Restrictions on the client (diet, bed rest, isolation)

•  Plan of care for the client (IV therapy, pain management, wound care, family concerns)

•  Significant assessment findings from the previous shifts

200

What else should you document when you chart a symptom

Interventions and clients response
300

SOAP charting

Organized according to subjective data, objective data, assessment, and plan.This format may be used to address single problems or to write summative client notes.

(IER) intervention, evaluation, revision

300

When would you use  an occurrence form

Reportable events such as:

Falls or other pt injury, loss of patient belongings, theft or any criminal activity, or administration of the wrong medicine.

300

When should verbal orders be used?

In an emergency

300

What should you avoid when documenting

Judgments, assumptions, opinions, spelling and grammar errors, what someone else heard or did

400

Focus charting

Not necessarily organized according to problems. It can highlight the client’s concerns, problems, or strengths. Charting occurs in three columns. The first column contains the time and date. The second column identifies the focus or problem addressed in the note. The third column contains charting in a DAR format. 

DAR is an acronym for Data, Action, and Response.

400

Documentation ABCs (A-H)

Accurate     Easy to read
Bias-free     Factual
Complete    Grammatical
Detailed      Harmless (legally)

400

What should be included in a transfer report

-Your name, facility, phone number

-Pt name age gender admitting and current diagnosis, and current status, and HCP

-Last set of vitals

-Procedures or surgeries performed (related to current prob)

- Tubes in place (IV, cath)

-Wounds

-Contact info for family

-Directives (code status, precautions)

-Reason for transfer




400

If an error is made in nursing documentation, what should the nurse do?

The entry is noted as being an error, and an addendum with correct information is added.

500

Long-term care documentation must include

(a) a comprehensive assessment using the Minimum Data Set for Resident Assessment and Care Screen-ing (MDS) within 14 days of admission and up-dates every 3 months with any significant change in client condition, (b) a report of any changes in a client’s condition to the primary care provider and the client’s family, and (c) a summary by an LVN/LPN or RN either weekly for clients receiving skilled services or every 2 weeks for clients receiving intermediate care services

500

CBE

Uses pre-printed flow sheets to document most aspects of care. CBE assumes that unless a separate entry is made an exception all standards have been met with a normal response. CBE flow sheets vary by specialty and in some cases even by diagnosis.

500

Do not use Abbreviations

"U” or “u”
   
“IU”

Q.D., QD, q.d., qd

Q.O.D., QOD, q.o.d., qod

MS, MSO4, and MgSO4

The trailing zero for medications (X.0 mg)

Lack of leading zero (.X mg)

500

Steps to take when receiving telephone / verbal orders

- Have second nurse listen if possible

-Document only when you hear it

-Repeat back

-Spell unfamiliar names / words

-Pronounce digits separately 

-Make sure it makes sense for patient

-Transcribe into chart asap

-Have providers name and number

-Get countersigned within 24 hrs

500

Can documenting be delegated?

Each member of the team is responsible for documenting her part in the care of the client.  You are responsible for documenting the care you provide. Never chart the actions of others as if you performed them.

600

Advantages of Electronic Health Record

• Reduce documentation time

• Information can be stored and retrieved quickly, easily accessed remotely, and accessed the same time by multiple hcp  

•  Embedded protocols improve consistency of care and adherence to clinical practice guidelines.

• Medical errors are minimized or prevented through programmed alerts and clinical reminders 

•  Repetition and duplication are reduced.

•  Communication is improved between health care providers.

•  Information is permanently stored 

•  Confidentiality of client information is protected

600

FACT system

Similar to CBE in that it include sonly exceptions to the norm. Four key elements: (1) Flow sheets individualized to specific services; (2) Assessment features standardized with baseline parameters; (3) Concise, integrated progress notes and flow sheets documenting the client’s condition and responses; and (4) Timely entries documenting when care is given.

600

Medication administration times

STAT- immediately

Scheduled - regularly

Unscheduled - appropriate time (pre-op meds before pt goes into or)

Continuous - IV infusions

Single order - once at a prescribed time but not necessarily immediately

600

Under what circumstances should documentation occur prior to a procedure being done?

Charting ahead should never be done.

600

Why do long-term care clients require less frequent charting than clients in acute care settings?

Clients in long-term care (LTC) usually are receiving less intensive nursing care than those in acute care hospitals.

700

Advantages of paper healthcare record

Advantages

- Familiar

- Does not require large database or secure network

- No downtime (power outage)

-Inexpensive

700

When should care be documented?

Documentation should be performed as soon as possible after you make an observation or provide care.

700

Additional information for charting medication

- Type and site of injections

- Assessment before administration (bp meds, heart meds, insulin, anticoagulants) 

- Patient reaction to medication

- Patient refusal

- Omitted or delayed meds

700

Benefits of large systems using electronic health records

To develop better disease treatment methods                                                                                

To understand disease causes and progression           

To determine outcomes for various populations                    

700

When should a nurse complete a discharge summary

Pt is moved to a different unit, facility, or home

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