Any documentation tips for when you're in a community mental health center and seeing patients back to back for 20 min med checks and 1 hr evals? I can do it easily with paper check off charting but this is electronic charting.
Any documentation tips for when you're in a community mental health center and seeing patients back to back for 20 min med checks and 1 hr evals? I can do it easily with paper check off charting but this is electronic charting.
QIDS-SR.
Saves time, and keeps appointments from becoming addtl symptom checklists.
meaning have the pt fill out the QIDS-SR while in the waiting room?
Check off lists? Bleh.
Templates can work as long as the information you place in the chart has some real data to convey.
Get them to buy a dictation system like dragon or just learn to type faster. Its important to have a good formulation for every patient. One of the worst things about medicare. Makes people into drones. Do yourself a favor. Code a 90862 and actually do a good job on the interview and the note. Screw the checklist or incorporate a very basic checklist based on what your legal deparment says.

They have Dragon but I've only been able to spend a short while on it my first day and I'm not up to speed on it. Second day I had a full load of patients while trying to learn their system. I'm using a SOAP template except for initial evals. I don't do the scheduling. I'm "presented" with a list of the days clients. I'm also a 2 finger typer, lol!
Last place I was at I had a 1 page mostly check-off page. It was handy because you could hold your clipboard while you faced the patient and made a few notes. I was basically finished when patient walked out the door. Paper charting does have it's benefits. I don't want to do anything on a computer while with a patient.
Been here 4 days and have yet to be introduced around nor even tour the entire building! I feel like a lackey thrown in a back room with patients herded to my office. But hey, I'm locums and will be gone in 3 months!![]()
What are you guy's thoughts on typing the subjective part of your while a patient is talking--i.e. just type their answers to your questions directly into a note?
I have always been opposed to this, but I was thinking about it today and wonder if it's as bad as I previously thought. If you could have a small laptop, face the patient directly, and type while maintaining good eye contact, might that work?
Has anyone tried this?
What are you guy's thoughts on typing the subjective part of your while a patient is talking--i.e. just type their answers to your questions directly into a note?
I have always been opposed to this, but I was thinking about it today and wonder if it's as bad as I previously thought. If you could have a small laptop, face the patient directly, and type while maintaining good eye contact, might that work?
Has anyone tried this?
I seem to remember reading a journal article a while back about the deleterious effect computer use during PCP visits had on patient-perceived quality of communication. I think the primary attribution made, though, was poor body language - lack of eye contact, etc. I'd imagine that if you could maintain eye contact, it probably wouldn't hurt (would probably help a lot if you had a silent keyboard).
What are you guy's thoughts on typing the subjective part of your while a patient is talking--i.e. just type their answers to your questions directly into a note?
I have always been opposed to this, but I was thinking about it today and wonder if it's as bad as I previously thought. If you could have a small laptop, face the patient directly, and type while maintaining good eye contact, might that work?
Has anyone tried this?
At the VA clinic, I had a template for combat-related PTSD interview that was designed exactly the same as the one the VA disability benefits examiners used. (A clever social worker "somehow" got his hands on it for me.) If I believed the pt had combat-related PTSD, then I always had the pt make a written request for my evaluation write-up. I told them to hand it to the benefits examiner before answering any questions. (Make a bureaucrat's life easier, and he will generally agree with you.) This worked like a charm. Almost every patient with true combat-related PTSD got benefits on the first try.
Don't you want to pass that around 😀
I like the part of your MSE regarding TC. I always play around with how to word the TC. I used to put-denies AH/VH/Delusions/Paranoia, no evidence of obsessive or intrusive thoughts.
However I like the wording along the lines you use of-no behavior or expressed thoughts that were consistent with AH/VH/Delusions etc.
Subtle but I never thought the "pt denies" was a good one since often the patient will not admit to the psychosis! (clearly!)
Thanks!
p.s-for the love of God learn to type with all 10 fingers! If 2nd grade kids can learn surely you can pick it up quickly!! You will save yourself a LOT of grief!!
Thanks. You have 10 fingers? I do get a lot of abuse from my wife who can look in one direction while making the keyboard sound like an automatic weapon. But, but, when am I going to have time to take a class?