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Documenting Data

This document discusses guidelines and purposes for nursing documentation. It addresses documenting both subjective and objective client data using various forms, including initial assessment forms, ongoing assessment forms, and focused assessment forms. The purposes of documentation include providing a record of care over time, ensuring communication between providers, and meeting legal and reimbursement requirements. Proper documentation involves recording specific, measurable findings without judgment and following guidelines like legible writing and correct grammar.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
362 views

Documenting Data

This document discusses guidelines and purposes for nursing documentation. It addresses documenting both subjective and objective client data using various forms, including initial assessment forms, ongoing assessment forms, and focused assessment forms. The purposes of documentation include providing a record of care over time, ensuring communication between providers, and meeting legal and reimbursement requirements. Proper documentation involves recording specific, measurable findings without judgment and following guidelines like legible writing and correct grammar.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DOCUMENTING DATA

 Another crucial part of the first step in the nursing process

 Addressed specifically by various state nurse practice acts, accreditation


and/or reimbursement agencies, professional organizations, professional
organizations

 Categories of information on the forms are designed to ensure that the nurse
gathers pertinent information needed to meet the standards and guidelines of
the specific institutions and to develop a plan of care for the client.

PURPOSE OF DOCUMENTATION

 Provides a chronologic source of client assessment data and a progressive


record of assessment findings that outline the client’s course of care

 Ensures that information about the client and family is easily accessible to
members of the health care team; provides a vehicle for communication; and
prevents fragmentation, repetition, and delays in carrying out the plan of care

 Establishes a basis for screening or validating proposed diagnoses

 Acts as a source of information to help diagnose new problems

 Offers a basis for determining the educational needs of the client, family, and
significant others

 Provides a basis for determining eligibility for care and reimbursement

 Careful recording of data can support financial reimbursement or gain


additional reimbursement for transitional or skilled care needed by the client

 Constitutes a permanent legal record of the care that was or was not given to
the client.

 Forms a component of client acuity system or client classification systems


(Eggland & Heinemann, 1994)

 Numeric values may be assigned to various levels of care to help determine


the staffing mix for the unit
 Provides access to significant epidemiologic data for future investigations
and research and educational endeavors.

 Promotes compliance with legal, accreditation, reimbursement, and


professional standard requirements.

INFORMATION REQUIRING DOCUMENTATION

Subjective Data

 Typically consist of biographic data, current health concern(s) and


symptoms (or the client’s chief complaint), past health history, family
history, and lifestyle and health practices information

 Includes:

 client’s name, age, occupation, ethnicity, and support systems or


resources

 present health concern review is recorded in statements that


reflect the client’s current symptoms

 describe items as accurately and descriptively as possible

 use a memory tool to further explore every symptom reported


by the client

 past health history data tell the nurse about events that happened
before the client’s admission to the health care facility or the
current encounter with the client

 family history data include information about the client’s


biologic family

 lifestyle and health practices information typically details risk


behaviors

 be sure to be comprehensive, yet succinct


Objective Data

 Includes inspection, palpation, percussion, and auscultation

 Help to further define the client’s problems, establish baseline data for
ongoing assessments, and validate the subjective data obtained during
the nursing history interview

 General rules apply:

 make notes as you perform the assessments, and document as


concisely as possible

 avoid documenting general non-descriptive or nonmeasurable


terms such as normal, abnormal, good, fair, satisfactory, or poor

 instead, use specific descriptive and measurable terms about


what you inspected, palpated, percussed, and auscultated

GUIDELINES FOR DOCUMENTATION

 Document legibly or print neatly in non-erasable ink.

 Use correct grammar and spelling.

 Avoid wordiness that creates redundancy.

 Use phrases instead of sentences to record data.

 Record data findings, not how they were obtained.

 Write entries objectively without making premature judgments or diagnoses.

 Record the client’s understanding and perception of problems.

 Avoid recording the word “normal” for normal findings.

 Record complete information and details for all client symptoms or


experiences.

 Include additional assessment content when applicable.


 Support objective data with specific observations obtained during the
physical examination.

ASSESSMENT FORMS USED FOR DATA

Initial Assessment Form

 Called a nursing admission or admission database

 Has four (4) different types:

1. Open-Ended Forms (Traditional Form)

 Calls for narrative description of problem and listing of topics

 Provides lines for comments

 Individualizes information

 Provides “total picture,” including specific complaints and


symptoms in the client’s own words

 Increases risk of failing to ask a pertinent question because questions


are not standardized

 Requires a lot of time to complete the database

2. Cued or Checklist Forms

 Standardizes data collection

 Lists (categorizes) information that alerts the nurse to specific


problems or symptoms assessed for each client

 Usually includes a comment section after each category to allow for


individualization

 Prevents missed questions

 Promotes easy, rapid documentation

 Makes documentation somewhat like data entry because it requires


nurse to place checkmarks in boxes instead of writing narrative
 Poses chance that a significant piece of data may be missed because
the checklist does not include the area of concern

3. Integrated Cued Checklist

 Combines assessment data with identified nursing diagnoses

 Helps cluster data, focuses on nursing diagnoses, assists in


validating nursing diagnosis labels, and combines assessment with
problem listing in one form

 Promotes use by different levels of caregivers, resulting in enhanced


communication among the disciplines

4. Nursing Minimum Data Set

 Comprises format commonly used in long-term care facilities

 Has a cued format that prompts nurse for specific criteria; usually
computerized

 Includes specialized information, such as cognitive patterns,


communication (hearing and vision) patterns, physical function and
structural patterns, activity patterns, restorative care, and the like

 Meets the needs of multiple data users in the health care system

 Establishes comparability of nursing data across clinical populations,


settings, geographic areas, and time

Frequent or Ongoing Assessment Form

 Flow charts that help staff to record and retrieve data for frequent
reassessments

 Frequent Vital Signs Sheet - allows for vital signs to be recorded in a graphic
format that promotes easy visualization of abnormalities

 Assessment Flow Chart - allows for rapid comparison of recorded assessment


data from one time period to the next
 Progress Notes - may be used to document unusual events, responses,
significant observations, or interactions because the data are inappropriate for
flow records

 Flow Sheets - streamline the documentation process and prevent needless


repetition of data

Focused or Specialty Area Assessment Form

 Forms that are focused on one major area of the body for clients who have a
particular problem

 Usually abbreviated versions of admission data sheets with specific


assessment data related to the purpose of the assessment

REFERENCES:

Kelley, J., Sprengel, A., Weber, J.. Health Assessment In Nursing Fourth Edition
(2009). Lippincott. Williams and Wilkins. Wolters Kluwer.

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