Clinical Documentation Amish A Dangodara, MD, FACP Professor of Medicine Hospitalist Program University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 07.11.14.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin.
Advertisements

Post-Op Pulmonary Embolism
NLP Highlights GS Savova And team. Medication CEM template associatedCode Change_status Conditional Dosage Duration End_date Form Frequency Generic Negation_indicator.
Atypical Polymyalgia Rheumatica
Prepared by: Tristan Villanueva Arcibal BSN-RN Presented on: July 16, 2013 A CASE PRESENTATION OF A PATIENT WITH DIABETIC KETOACIDOCIS (DKA)
© 2007 Thomson - Wadsworth Chapter 13 Nutrition Care and Assessment.
Lower Gastrointestinal Bleeding
NYU Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Rennie Rhee MD, PGY-2 January 13, 2010 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
PCM-3 END OF LIFE Session 1 December 2, Session Objectives At the conclusion of this PCM-3 session, students will be able to State and apply the.
History and Physical Examination Mike Clark, M.D..
LIVER PATHOLOGY LAB MHD II January 20, Case 1 Describe the low power findings.
Anemia Lab MHD I November 3, Case 1 A CBC is ordered on a 32-year old healthy man as part of a life-insurance policy evaluation.
Slide 1 Copyright © 2007, 2004, by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Baseline Vital Signs and SAMPLE History Chapter 5.
Case Discussion: Cell Injury At the end of the Case Discussion, the involved group is requested to submit a report of answers to all the questions asked.
Slide 1 Copyright © 2007, 2004, by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Focused History and Physical Examination of the Medical.
CCA Practical Advice. CCA Demonstration of fundamental clinical skills essential to safe and effective patient care. Designed to measure student competency.
1 Mosby items and derived items © 2010 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 2 The Medical History and the Interview.
NURSING EVALUATION OF THE ABDOMEN MATHENY MEDICAL AND EDUCATIONAL CENTER The Abdominal Evaluation.
The History and Physical Exam. The History Welcome the patient - ensure comfort and privacy Know and use the patient's name - introduce and identify yourself.
PROGRESS NOTE (SOAP Notes)
Core Topic UCI Internal Medicine Residency Learning Objectives Review the major causes of upper GI bleeding and important elements of the history.
Clinical Pathological Conference Kartikya Ahuja, M.D. Resident Physician Department of Medicine NYU School of Medicine July 20 th, 2007.
PROBLEM BASED LEARNING
Department of Medicine Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Ilana Bragin January 14 th, 2009 NYU Langone Medical Center Internal Medicine Residency Program.
Case Based Decision Making: A Critical Review of Interventions Eckhard Alt, M.D. Robert Smith, M.D. Cardiac Catheterization Conference March 30, 2004.
NYU Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Jacqueline Lonier, PGY2 November 3rd, 2010 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
Preparing Patients for the Operating Room Sugong Chen June 22, 2015.
E and M Audit Forms M. Cremers NOTE: Doctor must have asked / noted at least one of the above listed 10 components in the patient’s chart note.
Acute Renal Failure Cases. Case 1- HPI 71 yo mw/ fever and dysuria for 2 days Decreased UOP but increased frequency Yesterday vomited 3-4 times and developed.
Internal Medicine Clinical Pathological Conference July 18, 2008.
NYU Medicine Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Cindy Fang PGY2 5/28/2014 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
NYU Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Audrey Pendleton, MD PGY2 November 29, 2011 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
NYU Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Phillip Joseph, MD, PGY-2 September 25 th, 2013 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
Lung Cancer By: Autumn Crawford. Symptoms Many people dismiss or adapt to a chronic cough, attributing it to something else. It is just allergies, a cough.
Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette October 15 th, 2008 Srikant Duggirala, M.D.
APPROACH TO CHEST PAIN. OBJECTIVES  1. Establish a differential diagnosis for chest pain  2. Know what clues to obtain on history to rule-in or out.
NYU Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Lindsay Innes, MD PGY2 September 20, 2011 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
NYU Medicine Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Himali Weerahandi, PGY3 March 6, 2012 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
CASE 102: 48-Year-Old man with nausea and weakness.
Clinical Correlations The NYU Internal Medicine Blog A Daily Dose of Medicine
Medicine Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Jack Naggar, MD PGY-2 March 5, 2013 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette December 3, 2008 Steven Giovannone, MD.
NYU Medicine Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Natasha Berezovskaya, PGY-2 November 6, 2013 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
NYU Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Maryann Kwa, MD PGY-3 March 20, 2012 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
The Medical History and Interview
NYU Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Andy Levy, MD PGY-2 March 26, 2013 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
Clinical Correlations The NYU Langone Online Journal of Medicine
NYU Medical Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette Verity Schaye, MD PGY-3 September 15, 2010 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
NYU Medicine Grand Rounds Clinical Vignette David Altszuler, MD PGY-2 December 11, 2013 U NITED S TATES D EPARTMENT OF V ETERANS A FFAIRS.
VCU DEATH AND COMPLICATIONS CONFERENCE.  24 year old male  h/o UC diagnosed 1.5 years ago Treated with multiple agents with minimal efficacy Remicade,
Introduction to Clinical Medicine By: Dr. Rupani.
Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics.
GENERAL SURGERY Case Presentation III-B Dr. Erasmo Members: de Leon, Gemma de Mesa, Angelica de Vera, Jestha dela Cruz, Ciara.
Clinical Correlations The NYU Internal Medicine Blog A Daily Dose of Medicine
GASTROINTESTINAL PATHOLOGY LAB #1 January 10, 2013.
Red blood cell disorders / Anemia laboratory
Colon Mass SGD. Case A 45‐year old female comes to the hospital with moderately severe colicky abdominal pain, abdominal distention, and nausea of two.
GASTROINTESTINAL. CASE STUDY Symptom free during the intervening period until 8 months prior to current admission February 2010 – Colicky but tolerable.
Copyright © 2008 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Health History and Physical Assessment Lecture 1.
EM Clerkship: Abdominal Pain. Objectives Standard approach to abdominal pain as CC Broad differential diagnosis development Properly use labs and studies.
History Taking and Physical Exam How to efficiently and accurately Take a history? E. Rahimi, MD Department of Internal Medicine, Tohid hospital, MUK.
From CRANA clinical procedure manual 3rd Edition pages
Health Care terms and language (Health care records)
Chapter 2 Diseases of the Abdomen
Mark Drexler, MD Wednesday 5/1/13
Background Information
Health Care terms and language (Health care records)
Case 3 Andrew Sitzmann Danielle Paulozzi Andrew Emerson Miguel Linares.
Presentation transcript:

Clinical Documentation Amish A Dangodara, MD, FACP Professor of Medicine Hospitalist Program University of California, Irvine School of Medicine

Need 2 Volunteers: R1 & R3

Clinical Documentation Chief Complaint HPI: 4+ elements of chief complaint Past Hx: 3/3 –PMHx Medical, Surgical, Psych, OB, etc. Allergies, Medications –FHx –SHx ROS: 9+ systems Exam: 8+ systems or 2 detailed systems Data: 2+ elements Assessment: acute, active, unstable Plan

Case High BP, 1985 High cholesterol, 1989 Diabetes, 1991 Pancreatitis, 1994 Gall bladder surgery, 1994 Liver failure & sepsis, 1994 Tracheostomy & G-tube, 1994, removed 1995 Blood clot in lung, 1994 Fluid in lung, 2005 Ovarian cancer, 2005, surgery 2006, chemotherapy Atenolol 100 mg at night Fosinopril 20 mg per day, twice a day Lasix 20 mg per day Glyburide 15 mg per day, 2 in morning, 1 at night Lipitor 40 mg at night Multivitamin 1 daily Calcium/Vitamin D twice a day Vicodin extra 1, 4-5 times a day Iron 325 mg times a day Ms. Anne Gina Pektoras is a 56 year old Greek woman who presents with a chief complaint of abdominal pain and shows you the following list:

Case BP 98/56, P 112, RR 16, T 37.6, Wt 82 Kg Na 146, K 2.9, Cl 114, HCO3 32, BUN 26, Cr 1.4, glucose 54 WBC 6400, Hgb 14.8, Hct 46%, Platelet 273,000 Albumin 3.8, Alk Phos 68, TBil 1.2, AST 24, ALT 22 INR 0.98, PTT 32, CK 427, MB 6.3, MBI 1.5, troponin <0.03 The ED nurse hands you the following information:

Initial Differential Dx What is the most likely cause of abdominal pain? A)Cardiac B)Gastric/Liver/Pancreas C)Vascular D)Neurological E)Muscular F)Infectious G)Metabolic/Endocrine H)Intestinal I)Neoplastic J)Other

Obtain and Review the H&P

Exam Vitals: BP 98/56, P 112, RR 16, T 37.6, Wt 82 Kg HEENT: dry oral mucosa Abdomen: slightly distended, old midline scar from pelvic surgery, old scars from prior G-tube and colostomy that was reversed, tympanic to percussion, no HSM, no ascites or other stigmata of chronic liver disease, diffusely tender, but more in LLQ, no peritoneal signs, slightly hyperactive high pitched bowel sounds Pelvic: blind vaginal cuff without discharge or tenderness Rectal: normal tone, non-tender, no blood Extremities: tachycardic pulses, thready, poor skin turgor Rest of exam is normal

Assessment What is the most likely cause of abdominal pain? A)Cardiac B)Gastric/Liver/Pancreas C)Vascular D)Neurological E)Muscular F)Infectious G)Metabolic/Endocrine H)Intestinal I)Neoplastic J)Other

Plan What initial test(s) will you order? A)Additional cardiac enzymes B)AAS C)CT Abdomen/Pelvis D)Pancreatic enzymes E)Abdominal U/S F)Blood and urine cultures G)ABG H)CT Chest Angiography I)Other

H & P HPI: This is a normally independent 56 year old woman who lives alone and presents with 7-9/10 severity, intermittent, achy, pressure-like, sometimes sharp, left-sided abdominal pain, lasting hours to days that began 2 months ago, initially with a frequency 1-2 times per week, and now progressing to nearly daily occurrence for the past week, associated with 1 week of constipation and nausea but without emesis or distention. The pain is exacerbated by eating solids more than liquids but unaffected by positional changes of the body and does not radiate anywhere, but is somewhat improved with eructation and flatus, as well as Vicodin which reduces severity to 3/10. She has reduced dietary intake for 2 days associated with dizziness and weakness, as well as clouded thinking and sweating. She denies alcohol use, hematemesis, BRBPR, or diarrhea. PMHx includes pancreatitis in 1994 and Ovarian cancer in 2005.

What is Assessment now? What is the most likely cause of abdominal pain? A)Cardiac B)Gastric/Liver/Pancreas C)Vascular D)Neurological E)Muscular F)Infectious G)Metabolic/Endocrine H)Intestinal I)Neoplastic J)Other

Evaluate H&P

Summary: HPI HPI: 7 elements of the chief complaint Location Quality Chronology/Duration Severity/Intensity Associated Symptoms Aggravating or Alleviating factors Impact or intervention Symptoms associated with differential diagnoses for chief complaint, whether positive or negative (ROS pertinent to chief complaint) Important past history or prior work-up that relates to chief complaint Avoid PMHx in first sentence unless VERY pertinent

Summary: Past History Past Medical History: Explain all medications with associated Dx Approximate onset and current status of problem Describe specifics if known (complications, how Dx made) Describe laterality (right shoulder pain, etc) or location (left arm DVT, etc) Determine nature of allergic reaction, if known Determine how medications are taken Family History: Focus on genetically transmitted conditions, infectious exposures, cause of death Social History: Focus on living situation, relationship, employment, independence, habits, environmental exposures

Summary: ROS and Exam ROS: List by system and label the system Do not repeat or contradict what was in HPI (copy/paste or templated ROS that is not carefully edited) Exam: List by system and label the system Findings should reflect current exam (avoid copy/paste or templated exam that does not apply to patient) Include pertinent negatives for what you were looking for as a result of presenting problem (rather than templated “standard” negative findings) List only what you actually examined and only examine what was clinically indicated for patient’s current status (avoid copy/paste or unedited templates)

Summary: Data Data: List findings pertinent to indication for why test was ordered (avoid copy/pasting entire reports or impressions) List “unexpected” findings only if they are clinically impactful Trend results if trending reveals important nuance that may not be easily appreciated based on single value Indicate if you personally interpreted the data or coordinated interpretation with another specialist

Summary: Assessment Assessment: Commit to a Dx or symptom followed by differential Dx, even if not certain (probable, possible, likely, or unlikely are ok) Avoid a summary of findings without associated Dx Avoid “rule out” terminology, “FEN,” or “prophylaxis”; indicate risk or Dx Indicate ICD-10 components: Dx or symptom followed by differential Dx and likelihood Type or Stage Acuity or severity Location and/or laterality Timing (present on admission, initial presentation, subsequent eval) Etiology (pathogen) Complication of Dx or associated co-morbidity

Summary: Plan Plan: Each plan should have corresponding assessment(s) Provide brief rationale for plan Should logically follow from assessment Include preventive measures on initial plan

Questions?