Diferencia entre revisiones de «Documentation for emergency physicians»
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== | ==Background== | ||
*Thorough documentation is essential for patient safety, medicolegal protection, and appropriate reimbursement | |||
* | *The ED medical record serves as a legal document, communication tool, and billing justification | ||
* | *Poor documentation is the most common reason for malpractice verdict against the physician, even when clinical care was appropriate<ref>Self TH, et al. The importance of documentation in medical malpractice cases. J Pharm Pract. 2010;23(6):526-531.</ref> | ||
* | *Document in real time whenever possible; retrospective documentation is less accurate and less credible | ||
* | *As of 2023, CMS E/M coding for ED visits is based primarily on medical decision making (MDM) or total time, no longer requiring specific history/exam element counts for billing level<ref>American Medical Association. CPT Evaluation and Management (E/M) Office or Other Outpatient (99202-99215) and Other (Inpatient/Observation) Services Code and Guideline Changes. 2023.</ref> | ||
* | |||
=== | ==Key Principles== | ||
*[[ | *"If you didn't document it, it didn't happen" is not true, but is a standard medicolegal axiom | ||
*[[ | *Document | ||
**The clinical reasoning, not just the diagnosis | |||
**Discussions with patients, families, consultants, and PMDs | |||
**Time-sensitive findings by time (e.g., time of stroke symptom onset, time antibiotics given in [[Sepsis|sepsis]]) | |||
**[[Against medical advice|AMA]] discussions thoroughly including capacity assessment | |||
**Reassessments before [[Discharge documentation|disposition]] | |||
=== | ==Components of the ED Medical Record== | ||
===See Also | ===History=== | ||
*'''HPI''': location, severity, timing, modifying factors, associated symptoms, onset, quality, duration | |||
*'''ROS''': see [[Review of systems documentation]] | |||
*'''PMH/FH/SH''': past medical, surgical, family, and social history | |||
===Physical Exam=== | |||
*See [[Physical exam documentation]] | |||
*Tailor to chief complaint; document pertinent positives AND negatives | |||
*Always document a reassessment exam prior to disposition | |||
===Medical Decision Making (MDM)=== | |||
*See [[MDM for different chief complaints]] | |||
*See [[MDM for different chief complaints (peds)]] | |||
*MDM is the primary driver of billing level under current CMS guidelines | |||
*Document differentials considered, data reviewed, and risk assessment | |||
*See [[Differential diagnosis documentation]] for sample language | |||
===Procedures=== | |||
*See [[Procedure sample documentation]] | |||
*See [[Informed consent documentation]] | |||
*Document: indication, consent, timeout, technique, findings, complications, post-procedure assessment | |||
===Reassessment=== | |||
*See [[Reexamination sample documentation]] | |||
*Document response to treatment, interval changes, and clinical trajectory | |||
==Special Documentation== | |||
*[[Critical care documentation]]: required for billing critical care time (CPT 99291/99292) | |||
*[[Observation documentation]]: required for observation-status patients | |||
*[[Against medical advice]]: capacity assessment and risk discussion | |||
*[[Discharge documentation]]: discharge instructions, follow-up, return precautions | |||
*[[Death documentation]]: time and pronouncement of death, family notification | |||
*[[Informed consent documentation]]: procedural consent elements | |||
==Billing== | |||
*See [[Billing]] for detailed CMS requirements and RVU information | |||
*MDM is the primary billing determinant for ED E/M visits | |||
*Critical care time (≥30 min) is billed separately and often yields higher RVUs | |||
*Document total critical care time and exclude separately billable procedures | |||
==See Also== | |||
*[[Residency: Basic Skills]] | *[[Residency: Basic Skills]] | ||
== | {{Documentation pages}} | ||
==References== | |||
<references/> | |||
[[Category:Documentation]] | [[Category:Documentation]] | ||
[[Category:Misc/General]] | |||
Revisión actual - 20:41 25 mar 2026
Background
- Thorough documentation is essential for patient safety, medicolegal protection, and appropriate reimbursement
- The ED medical record serves as a legal document, communication tool, and billing justification
- Poor documentation is the most common reason for malpractice verdict against the physician, even when clinical care was appropriate[1]
- Document in real time whenever possible; retrospective documentation is less accurate and less credible
- As of 2023, CMS E/M coding for ED visits is based primarily on medical decision making (MDM) or total time, no longer requiring specific history/exam element counts for billing level[2]
Key Principles
- "If you didn't document it, it didn't happen" is not true, but is a standard medicolegal axiom
- Document
- The clinical reasoning, not just the diagnosis
- Discussions with patients, families, consultants, and PMDs
- Time-sensitive findings by time (e.g., time of stroke symptom onset, time antibiotics given in sepsis)
- AMA discussions thoroughly including capacity assessment
- Reassessments before disposition
Components of the ED Medical Record
History
- HPI: location, severity, timing, modifying factors, associated symptoms, onset, quality, duration
- ROS: see Review of systems documentation
- PMH/FH/SH: past medical, surgical, family, and social history
Physical Exam
- See Physical exam documentation
- Tailor to chief complaint; document pertinent positives AND negatives
- Always document a reassessment exam prior to disposition
Medical Decision Making (MDM)
- See MDM for different chief complaints
- See MDM for different chief complaints (peds)
- MDM is the primary driver of billing level under current CMS guidelines
- Document differentials considered, data reviewed, and risk assessment
- See Differential diagnosis documentation for sample language
Procedures
- See Procedure sample documentation
- See Informed consent documentation
- Document: indication, consent, timeout, technique, findings, complications, post-procedure assessment
Reassessment
- See Reexamination sample documentation
- Document response to treatment, interval changes, and clinical trajectory
Special Documentation
- Critical care documentation: required for billing critical care time (CPT 99291/99292)
- Observation documentation: required for observation-status patients
- Against medical advice: capacity assessment and risk discussion
- Discharge documentation: discharge instructions, follow-up, return precautions
- Death documentation: time and pronouncement of death, family notification
- Informed consent documentation: procedural consent elements
Billing
- See Billing for detailed CMS requirements and RVU information
- MDM is the primary billing determinant for ED E/M visits
- Critical care time (≥30 min) is billed separately and often yields higher RVUs
- Document total critical care time and exclude separately billable procedures
See Also
Documentation Pages
- General
- Components of the Medical Record
- Procedure and Reexamination
- Special Documentation
- Reference
References
- ↑ Self TH, et al. The importance of documentation in medical malpractice cases. J Pharm Pract. 2010;23(6):526-531.
- ↑ American Medical Association. CPT Evaluation and Management (E/M) Office or Other Outpatient (99202-99215) and Other (Inpatient/Observation) Services Code and Guideline Changes. 2023.
