Sunday, July 3, 2016

How to Document examination in Medical record

DOCUMENTATION OF EXAMINATION

The levels of E/M services are based on four types of examination that are defined as follows:

Problem Focused -- a limited examination of the affected body area or organ system.

Expanded Problem Focused -- a limited examination of the affected body area or organ system and other symptomatic or related organ system(s).

Detailed -- an extended examination of the affected body area(s) and other symptomatic or related organ system(s).

Comprehensive -- a general multi-system examination or complete examination of a single organ system.



For purposes of examination, the following body areas are recognized:

Head, including the face

Neck

Chest, including breasts and axillae

Abdomen

Genitalia, groin, buttocks

Back, including spine

Each extremity



For purposes of examination, the following organ systems are recognized:

Constitutional (e.g., vital signs, general appearance)

Eyes

Ears, nose, mouth, and throat

Cardiovascular

Respiratory

Gastrointestinal

Genitourinary

Musculoskeletal

Skin

Neurologic

Psychiatric

Hematologic/lymphatic/immunologic



The extent of examinations performed and documented is dependent upon clinical judgment and the nature of the presenting problem(s). They range from limited examinations of single body areas to general multi-system or complete single organ system examinations.

DG: Specific abnormal and relevant negative findings of the examination of the affected or symptomatic body area(s) or organ system(s) should be documented. A notation of "abnormal” without elaboration is insufficient.

DG: Abnormal or unexpected findings of the examination of the unaffected or asymptomatic body area(s) or organ system(s) should be described.

DG: A brief statement or notation indicating "negative" or "normal" is sufficient to document normal findings related to unaffected area(s) or asymptomatic organ system(s).

DG: The medical record for a general multi-system examination should include findings about 8 or more of the 12 organ systems.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Popular Posts