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Clicking on a checklist of symptoms seldom provides sufficient information about the patient’s illness. “Hypertension” and “type 2 diabetes” are not assessments; they are diagnoses that do not tell the person reading the electronic health record (EHR) how the patient is doing. A diagnosis of “abdominal pain” without a prioritized differential is inadequate, especially in court.
Why is visit documentation too often inadequate? I am convinced it is rarely due to clinician incompetence, laziness, or lack of knowledge, but nearly always due to a combination of inadequate EHR formats and billing documentation requirements that encourage quantity rather than quality. Documentation is no longer driven by the essential need to record the care provided.
I’m sure a lot of you are nodding your heads in agreement. You all know what those EHR notes look like—cluttered with cut-and-pasted information drawn from prior encounters that document no end of details regarding medical, family, and social histories, facts that are often completely irrelevant to the reason the patient is in the office today. And unless one meticulously updates those other elements of the patient’s record, this information pulled into the note may be inaccurate.
I am not the only one complaining. The American Medical Association just published Improving Care: Priorities to Improve Electronic Health Record Usability,1 which outlines 8 priorities for EHR improvement. The first is to “Enhance physicians’ ability to provide high-quality patient care.” I could not agree more. I think today’s EHRs are like an old-fashioned crank phone and what we really need is an iPhone.
Something has got to change.
So tell me: Have any of you figured out how to use your EHR to enhance the quality of your documentation?
Reference
1. American Medical Association. Improving Care: Priorities to Improve Electronic Health Record Usability. American Medical Association Web site. Available at: https://download.ama-assn.org/resources/doc/ps2/x-pub/ehr-priorities.pdf. Accessed September 18, 2014.
Clicking on a checklist of symptoms seldom provides sufficient information about the patient’s illness. “Hypertension” and “type 2 diabetes” are not assessments; they are diagnoses that do not tell the person reading the electronic health record (EHR) how the patient is doing. A diagnosis of “abdominal pain” without a prioritized differential is inadequate, especially in court.
Why is visit documentation too often inadequate? I am convinced it is rarely due to clinician incompetence, laziness, or lack of knowledge, but nearly always due to a combination of inadequate EHR formats and billing documentation requirements that encourage quantity rather than quality. Documentation is no longer driven by the essential need to record the care provided.
I’m sure a lot of you are nodding your heads in agreement. You all know what those EHR notes look like—cluttered with cut-and-pasted information drawn from prior encounters that document no end of details regarding medical, family, and social histories, facts that are often completely irrelevant to the reason the patient is in the office today. And unless one meticulously updates those other elements of the patient’s record, this information pulled into the note may be inaccurate.
I am not the only one complaining. The American Medical Association just published Improving Care: Priorities to Improve Electronic Health Record Usability,1 which outlines 8 priorities for EHR improvement. The first is to “Enhance physicians’ ability to provide high-quality patient care.” I could not agree more. I think today’s EHRs are like an old-fashioned crank phone and what we really need is an iPhone.
Something has got to change.
So tell me: Have any of you figured out how to use your EHR to enhance the quality of your documentation?
Clicking on a checklist of symptoms seldom provides sufficient information about the patient’s illness. “Hypertension” and “type 2 diabetes” are not assessments; they are diagnoses that do not tell the person reading the electronic health record (EHR) how the patient is doing. A diagnosis of “abdominal pain” without a prioritized differential is inadequate, especially in court.
Why is visit documentation too often inadequate? I am convinced it is rarely due to clinician incompetence, laziness, or lack of knowledge, but nearly always due to a combination of inadequate EHR formats and billing documentation requirements that encourage quantity rather than quality. Documentation is no longer driven by the essential need to record the care provided.
I’m sure a lot of you are nodding your heads in agreement. You all know what those EHR notes look like—cluttered with cut-and-pasted information drawn from prior encounters that document no end of details regarding medical, family, and social histories, facts that are often completely irrelevant to the reason the patient is in the office today. And unless one meticulously updates those other elements of the patient’s record, this information pulled into the note may be inaccurate.
I am not the only one complaining. The American Medical Association just published Improving Care: Priorities to Improve Electronic Health Record Usability,1 which outlines 8 priorities for EHR improvement. The first is to “Enhance physicians’ ability to provide high-quality patient care.” I could not agree more. I think today’s EHRs are like an old-fashioned crank phone and what we really need is an iPhone.
Something has got to change.
So tell me: Have any of you figured out how to use your EHR to enhance the quality of your documentation?
Reference
1. American Medical Association. Improving Care: Priorities to Improve Electronic Health Record Usability. American Medical Association Web site. Available at: https://download.ama-assn.org/resources/doc/ps2/x-pub/ehr-priorities.pdf. Accessed September 18, 2014.
Reference
1. American Medical Association. Improving Care: Priorities to Improve Electronic Health Record Usability. American Medical Association Web site. Available at: https://download.ama-assn.org/resources/doc/ps2/x-pub/ehr-priorities.pdf. Accessed September 18, 2014.