Tara
Philcox
The
Problem
The
ongoing debate in America about health insurance coverage shows how healthcare
costs have climbed globally. In his recent article titled "Health
information exchanges reduce redundant medical procedures," Jack Karsten
reveals that the United States of America spends a higher share of the Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) on health care than other nation. Still, its health
care outcomes underperform those same nations (Karsten, 2017). Most of this
ineffectiveness is caused by the redundancy in medical documentation due to the
Electronic Medical Records (EMR). According to Karsten (2017), the
“Congressional Budget Office estimates the cost of procedures that did not
improve health outcomes at $700 billion per year.” This article will explain
redundancy in medical documentation due to EMR, propose solutions and offer
recommendations to improve patient outcomes and benefit nursing.
Examples
Redundancy
in medical documentation due to electronic medical records is associated with
several problems: copy/paste practice or cloning problems, patient
identification errors, authorship integrity issues, dictation errors without
validation, audit integrity, and healthcare abuse and fraud (Murphy, 2017).
Cloned documentation or copy/paste practice continues to be a major problem in
my facility that creates inaccurate information and unnecessary redundancy in
the electronic medical records. If not modified to be pertinent to the visit
and patient-specific, automated insertion of outdated or previous information
via electronic medical tools may raise significant compliance and quality of
care concerns. This has the potential to lead to medical liability issues. But with the providers wanting to see clients
quickly, it is hard to get them to change their ways.
The
other significant challenge caused by redundancy in medical documentation due
to electronic medical records is patient identification errors. The integrity
of documentation is at risk when administrators enter the wrong or inaccurate
data on a wrong patient health record. I
frequently have to edit charts due to the wrong information uploaded to a
patient chart, this exposes us often to HIPAA violations. Errors in patient
identification may affect patient safety, clinical decision making and impact a
patient's security and privacy (“Cures for Note Bloat," 2020). It can also
lead to increased costs to payers and patient providers and duplicate in
testing. Patient identification errors can grow within the electronic medical record
networks as the data proliferates. When health care systems fail to put a
validation step when using voice recognition, they are likely to experience
significant administrator documentation errors and data quality problems. Authorship
attributes the creation or origin of a specific unit of data to a particular
entity or patient acting at a given time. When there is more than one editor or
administrator to a document, it may not be easy to verify each service
provider's amount of work or the actual service provider.
The
other problem caused by redundancy in documentation due to electronic medical records
is the challenge of healthcare abuse and fraud. Healthcare fraud means the
intentional misrepresentation or deception that the entity or a person makes,
knowing very well that the deception or misrepresentation may lead to some
unauthorized benefit to the entity, party, or individual (Murphy, 2017). The
intentional fabrication of medical data to improve reimbursement is considered
a healthcare fraud. Fabrication can be caused by the misuse of templates
designed to boost documentation efficiency and the overuse of copy/paste practices.
On the other hand, health care abuse refers to practices or incidents that are
not consistent with accepted business or medical practices. These unintentional
incidents or practices may involve coding errors or repeated billing.
Audit
integrity is another significant problem caused by redundancy in medical
documentation due to electronic medical records. Regular audits are important
in ensuring only authorized users are making entries or accessing patient
medical records (“Cures for Note Bloat," 2020). Electronic medical records
that lack robust audit trail functionality may create legal liability for
medical service providers or uncertainty in the integrity or reliability of
health record documentation. This may also make it impossible for health care
facilities to determine when and if amendments or corrections were made to
patient health records, the nature of the changes, or the individual who made
the changes. This is a huge issue at my facility.
The Solution?
The
remedies or solutions that can be taken to improve the problem of redundancy in
medical documentation due to the electronic medical record fall into two
categories which are administrative and technical. Administrative solutions require health care
facilities to establish practices that support quality clinical documentation
such as implementing policies and using procedures and system capabilities and
functions to prevent fraud, commitment and desire to provide health care
ethically and the inclusion of a Health Information Management (HIM)
professional, for example, an electronic medical record team or a record
content expert to ensure the final product is compliant with all coding,
billing, regulatory, payer guidelines and documentation (“Cures for Note
Bloat," 2020). Policies must include patient identity programs such as
performance improvement measurements to monitor the percentage of duplicate
records and error rates within the specific electronic master patient index. Innovations
are also needed to improve documentation techniques and tools. Each hospital
staff has the responsibility to identify and prevent healthcare abuse and
fraud, and they must be held accountable in case any misrepresentation occurs.
The procedures and policies should ensure that demographic data are used to
link records across and within systems and the data is accurate. The technical
solutions call for capabilities in electronic medical record technology that
require user access management and authentication. This will restrict alterations
to auditing files and make it possible to track user activities, including
audit logs (Murphy, 2017).
To
solve the problems associated with clinical documentation, hybrid protocols,
and a pure NLP protocol should be used because they show promise for electronic
medical record documentation than Standard Entry alone. Natural language
processing is another key component that can ease EMR documentation burdens if
used with better technologies (Murphy, 2017). Organizations should also educate
and train their staff members to ensure they are well-informed about legal and
compliance risks. The education program must be maintained, monitored, and
offered annually or quarterly. A combination of technical and administrative
solutions will ensure the electronic medical records benefits all the
stakeholders involved.
What
Can We Hope to Expect?
The
changes will significantly improve patient outcomes and benefit nursing by
improving all aspects of health care, including effectiveness, safety,
patient-centeredness, education, efficiency, communication, equity, and
timeliness. The changes will also lower health care costs through reduced
duplication of testing and improve coordination in the healthcare system and
provide up-to-date, complete, and accurate information concerning patients. It
will also allow quick access and securely sharing of information between
patients and health care practitioners. Time is critical in nursing because
nurses are often overloaded with activities and tasks; the changes will
therefore help them save time. The other benefits that the changes will bring
include improved caregivers' satisfaction and productivity by worrying less
about documentation and administrational activities and concentrating on their
clinical activities. Customizing electronic medical records based on
caregiver's demands will increase their efficiency and increase patient safety
and decrease errors. Electronic medical records can, without doubt, improve
health worker efficiency and improve patient care if the problem of redundancy
is eliminated.
References
Cures for Note
Bloat. (2020, October 6). Foresee Medical. Retrieved from:
https://www.foreseemed.com/blog/note-bloat-cures
Karsten, J.
(2017, May 26). “Health information exchanges reduce redundant medical
procedures.” Brookings. Retrieved from:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.brookings.edu/blog/techtank/2017/05/26/health-information-exchanges-reduce-redundant-medical-procedures/amp/
Murphy, K.
(2017, February 24). “Improving Clinical Data Integrity through HER
Documentation.” Intelligent Healthcare Media. Retrieved from:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/ehrintelligence.com/features/amp/improving-achieving-data-integrity-through-ehr-documentation
Tara,
ReplyDeleteGreat blog, and I like your ideas about reducing redundancy in nursing documentation. In my current practice, we were looking at ways to reduce this as well. For instance, blood administration is a huge fall out in quality and documentation in the emergency department where I work. When investigating, we realized the way the EMR was set up drives the potential for over documentation as the pieces are located on many different flowsheets within the patient's chart.
On our unit, we have our own quality improvement coordinator and our own IT analyst coordinator. Granted we are a large ED with over 400 employees, however, having these individuals on the unit helps improve our quality measures substantially. The develop new and innovative ideas in real time when they see an opportunity to do so.
Tara,
ReplyDeleteThe hospital where I work transitioned to an EHR about a year ago. Although we chart more in the EHR, I spend much less time we redundant charting. An admission previously took about an hour, now I can complete it in roughly 30 minutes. I enjoy not having to comb through the file to find information and that it is a close as my computer. I no longer have to stay in the nursery while the doctor does round because she can find any information needed in the EHR about mom and baby. I feel much more productive and can much a greater amount of time educating mothers and families.