I personally like your format better. I had been told when I was on Gen Surg that the alternative is to do an Subjective documenting all the details, then an Objective/A/P by organ system for the remainder of the note. I did not like that one at all!
I agree, I do not like showing all the details in the Subjective area. The only things I will put are the disclaimers (seen, examined, chart reviewed) and I will only list what the patient complains of or how he subjectively feels. Unless they're sedated, then I'll put moving all extremities, withdraws from pain, etc in 1 line or so.
Thank you very much. I look forward to the ICU elective very much.
The Unit is one of my favorite places to be, it's like Medicine on crack.
Because of the nature of my schedule, I am going to be doing it 2 weeks in the first half of the year, and the remaining 2 weeks after my interviews, so that I could fit in some other electives. Do you think interviewers are going to care if I did the elective for 2 weeks rather than 4 by the time they see me?
Thanks!
In my experience, most places understand that you will need time to rotate and many others will understand that most students want to rotate through several programs to evaluate them. But there are always people who are butts out there.
There is a physician named
Lawrence L Weed who is one of experts on medical documentation. And if you can find a couple of books titled:
Medical records, medical education, and patient care:, read it. I can not remember if I read Medical records, medical education, and patient care: The problem-oriented medical record
or Medical records, medical education, and patient care;: The problem-oriented record as a basic tool, but I'm sure they are both good reads.
I'm still trying to figure out how to work in all the things in it which he suggests on how to make a great problem-oriented record. With the looming pay per performance system with insurance/mediwhatever, this will become increasingly important for our profession.
ETA: Wow, this post really makes me feel like a nerdy internist.