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Dictation Best Practices. A Guide for Physicians. Presented by the American Association for Medical Transcription. Dictation Best Practices. A Guide for Physicians. Sponsored by . Why Do You Dictate?. Documentation is an Essential Ingredient of Good Medical Care. Good Documentation.
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Dictation Best Practices A Guide for Physicians
Presentedby theAmerican Association for Medical Transcription Dictation Best Practices A Guide for Physicians Sponsored by
Why Do You Dictate? Documentation is an Essential Ingredient of Good Medical Care
Good Documentation • Accurate • Complete • Available When Needed
Quote or Quill Dictation is an effective and economical way to convey the patient’s story
The Challenge Communicate clearly and succinctly
Partners in Quality Medical Transcriptionists are documentation experts and your partner in creating the required record of care—accurately and efficiently.
Impact of Dictation • Documentation errors • Patient Safety • Sentinel Events • Turnaround Time • Costs
Patients at Risk • Poor dictation can result in the omission of very important words such as “no” or “non”, as in “there is (no) malignancy identified”
US Leads in Medical Errors “Thirty-four percent of U.S. patients received wrong medication, improper treatment or incorrect or delayed test results during the last two years, the Commonwealth Fund found.” US Leads Way in Medical Errors, S. Heavy, Common Dreams, November 23, 2005
View of the Courts According to the Wisconsin Supreme Court “We hold only that hospital records bear such an unusual indicia of reliability and trustworthiness that … such records satisfy the confrontation clause.”
Good Dictation • Improves communication among caregivers • Promotes patient safety • Reduces turnaround time from dictation to charting • Ensures uncompromised reports as legal documents
Poor Dictation • Leads to errors in transcription • Puts patients at risk • Slows and/or reduces reimbursement • Impacts timely delivery of care • Increases administrative and transcription costs
Problematic Dictation • Incorrect verbiage or grammar • Rapid speech • English as a second language • Articulation • Insufficient volume • Background noise • Incorrect or insufficient patient information
Turnaround Time • Quality patient care demands shorter turnaround time • Problematic dictation can double or triple time spent transcribing • Several problematic reports can affect timely delivery of all reports
Costs • Inferior dictation increases administrative costs • Inadequate dictation decreases or delays reimbursement • Poor dictation can increaseturnaround time, delaying treatment
Dictation • Requires special attention to clarity and style • No visual clues (lip movements, facial expressions) • Asynchronous communication • Lacks flow and rhythm of conversations • More difficult to comprehend
Speech Recognition • Realizing higher adoption rates • Incapable of completely replacing transcriptionists • Unable to interpret vast majority of dictators • Requires more attention to organization and articulation
Environment • Monitor background distractions such as voices, telephone ringing, and/or music • Avoid side conversations
Background Noise He had three recent _____ procedures and is seeing a cardiologist.
Organization • Organize data before dictating • Follow established templates
Disorganized Dictator Chest wall showed tenderness on pressing on the right lateral and anterior ribs area. Back showed kyphosis. Heart S1, S2.
Equipment • Refer to tip sheets for proper use of dictation equipment • Use correct hand-held settings to avoid clipped words • Hold the mic the proper distance from the mouth
Too Close to Microphone At that time, her chest x-ray ____ a new finding of ______ atelectasis which I felt was due to her residual RSV bronchiolitis.
“Puffing” the Mic Babinski and no clonus ____ in the upper and lower extremities. Her motor is normal. Her sensation is decreased in the C6 distribution on the left. She does have a positive Tinel sign over the median nerve but a negative Phalen sign.
Demographics • Key identifying information when prompted • State and spell the patient’s name • Include at least one other patient identifier (i.e., birth date or MRN) • State the date of service
Courtesy • Avoid eating and chewing gum • Pause while yawning, coughing or sneezing • Remember! We can hear what you wouldn’t want us to hear!
Yawning Back pain ____________. Past medical history is negative. Surgery negative.
Speech The dictator’s speed and poor articulation were cited as being the most frequent causes of problematic dictation.
Key Syllables • “No” or “known” • ABduction or ADduction • hyPO or hyPER
Abbreviations • Avoid uncommon abbreviations • Use abbreviations from facility’s approved list • Give clues when dictating common abbreviations • BMP versus BNP • CNS versus C&S
Numbers • Dictate numbers clearly and succinctly • Differentiate “fifty” and “sixty” (e.g. five-oh, six-oh) • Delineate vital signs and lab values with test names
Running Numbers Together Temperature is 98.3, 120/60, 105, 16.
Medications Carefully dictate medication names and dosages, especially those with sound-alikes (e.g. Endal, Inderal; MiraSept, Mircette)
Feedback Return notations on blanks or incorrect areas of the document to the transcription staff in order to prevent errors in the future
Dictation Tool Kit • Dictation Fact Sheet • Dictation 101 • Model Policies and Procedures • Sample Q Cards • Feedback Letter • Tip Sheet www.AAMT.org
The Bottom Line Good quality dictation and transcription is win-win for the patient, the caregiver, and the facility’s bottom line
Contact American Association for Medical Transcription www.aamt.org 800-982-2182
Sponsor MedQuist is the leading provider of clinical document workflow solutions. MedQuist provides document workflow management, digital dictation, speech recognition, dictation devices, Web-based transcription, electronic signature, medical coding and outsourcing services. MedQuist Inc.Corporate Offices 1000 Bishops Gate Blvd.Suite 300Mount Laurel, New Jersey08054-4632Phone: 800-233-3030 Fax: 856-206-4020