Diagnostic procedures

A Health Information Management (HIM) / Medical Records (MR) practitioner will find a series of diagnostic tests or diagnostic procedures – terms used interchangeably, incorporated into the medical record of a patient.

Diagnostic tests or procedures are necessary to formulate a medical diagnosis and the course of treatment based on a patient’s history and presenting symptoms. Diagnostic tests or procedures are also performed to determine abnormalities or disorders of various body systems to identify and to prioritise the treatments and procedures during periodic reassessment and evaluation of the patient’s expected outcomes.

In the post Plan Of Care (this link will open in a new tab of your current window) about individualised care plans, you can read to know about a patient’s care plan which is always related to his or her identified needs. But those needs may change as the result of clinical improvement or new information from a routine reassessment, for example from diagnostic tests such as abnormal laboratory or radiography results.

As diagnostic tests or procedures are expensive, they are prescribed usually selectively by the prescribing practitioner, who is either the doctor in most instances or other authorised  prescribing practitioners like advanced practice registered nurses who are authorised to order and perform certain diagnostic tests.

Diagnostic tests or procedures are either noninvasive or invasive. Noninvasive means the body is not entered with any type of instrument. The skin and other body tissues, organs, and cavities remain intact. Invasive means accessing the body’s tissue, organ, or cavity through some type of instrumentation procedure.

If you are working as a HIM/MR practitioner in a Joint Commission International  (JCI) accredited hospital or a hospital seeking JCI accredited status or infact at any hospital, the medical records show documentation evidence of doctors who had found an abnormality and had prescribed diagnostic tests or procedures to evaluate findings more closely. The JCI Standard COP.2.3 requires that such evidence be demonstrated in the patient’s medical record.

As the JCI Standard COP.2.3 intent statement specifically lists endoscopy and cardiac catheterisation diagnostic procedures, I shall provide some brief details on these diagnostic precudures.

Endoscopy is an invasive diagnostic technique using specialised instruments called endoscopes such as the sigmoidoscope, colonoscope, gastroscope, bronchoscope, and laryngoscope, for visual observation of internal organs through the intestinal tract. However, no incisions are made for routine endoscopy procedures.

 A team of doctors, nurses, and technicians perform a cardiac catheterisation procedure, which takes from 1 to 3 hours to obtain information about congenital or acquired heart defects, measure oxygen concentration, determine cardiac output, or assess the status of the heart’s structures and chambers. Therapeutic treatments may be done during the catheterisation to repair the heart, open valves, or dilate arteries.

Whatever the reason for diagnostic tests or procedures, diagnostic tests or procedures performed and the diagnostic findings (results) are always incorporated into the patient’s medical record. Such documentation on the appropriate forms will indicate details like the identity of the prescribing practitioner and his or her reason for performing the diagnostic and other procedures, if he or she had administered any anesthesia, dye, or other medications, type of specimen obtained and where it was delivered, vital signs and other assessment data such as patient’s tolerance of the procedure or pain and discomfort level as well as any symptoms of complications, patient or family teaching and demonstrated level of understanding  and written instructions given to the patient or family members about the diagnostic and other procedures.

A HIM/MR practitioner must will be able to differentiate between diagnostic and other procedures performed and the location of their diagnostic findings(results) from that for surgical procedures, a written surgical report or a brief operative note that can be found in the patient’s medical record.

References:
Caroline, BR & Mary, TK 2012, Textbook of basic nursing, 10th edn, Wolters Kluwer Health, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia, USA

Joint Commission International 2010, Joint Commission International Accreditation Standards For Hospitals, 4th edn, JCI, USA

Michelle AG & Mary JB 2011, Essentials of Health Information Management: Principles and Practices, 2nd edn, Delmar, Cengage Learning, NY, USA

Sue, CD & Patricia, KL 2011, Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practice, 4th edn, Delmar, Cengage Learning, NY, USA

Anaesthesia plan in the patient’s medical record

A Health Information Management (HIM) / Medical Records (MR) practitioner will find documentation of preoperative activities including each patient’s anaesthesia care which is planned and documented in the patient’s record.

The Joint Commission International (JCI) Standard ASC.5 specifically requires documentation of preoperative activities to include that each patient’s anaesthesia care is planned and documented in the patient’s medical record.

This is true for all patients in the preoperative phase in all hospitals, and not just for hospitals already JCI accredited or seeking JCI or other healthcare quality standards.

After the preoperative evaluation by an anaesthesiologist or another qualified individual as outlined in the post Anesthesia care must be given by a qualified individual (this link will open in a new tab of your current window), anaesthesia care is carefully planned and the anaesthesia plan is created,

The plan includes a list of drug choices and doses in detail, the method of administration, other medications and fluids, monitoring procedures, and anticipated postanesthesia care.

An HIM) / MR practitioner will find documentation of each patient’s anaesthesia care plan as shown in the sample General Anaesthesia Plan below documented in the patient’s medical record.

SAMPLE GENERAL ANAESTHESIA PLAN

Case
A 47-year-old woman with biliary colic and well-controlled asthma requires anaesthesia for laparoscopic cholecystectomy.

Preoperative Phase
Premedication
Midazolam, 1-2 mg IV, to reduce anxiety
Albuterol, two puffs, to prevent bronchospasm

Intraoperative Phase
Vascular access and monitoring
Vascular access: one peripheral IV catheter
Monitors: pulse oximetry, capnography, electrocardiogram, non-invasive blood pressure with standard adult cuff size, temperature

Induction
Propofol, 2 mg/kg IV (may precede with lidocaine, 1.5 mg/kg IV)
Neuromuscular blocking drug to facilitate tracheal intubation (succinylcholine, 1-2 mg/kg IV) or nondepolarizing neuromuscular-blocking drugs (rocuronium, 0.6 mg/kg)
Airway management
Facemask: adult medium size
Direct laryngoscopy: Macintosh 3 blade, 7.0-ID endotracheal tube
Maintenance
Inhaled aesthetic: sevoflurane or desflurane
Opioid-fentanyl: anticipate 2-4 mg/kg IV total during case
Neuromuscular blocking drug titrated to train-of-four monitor (peripheral nerve stimulator) at the ulnar nerve*

Emergence
Antagonize effects of nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking drug: neostigmine, 70 mg/kg, and glycopyrrolate, 14 mg/kg IV, titrated to train-of-four monitor
Antiemetic: dexamethasone, 4 mg IV, at start of case; ondansetron, 4 mg IV, at end of case
Tracheal extubation: when patient is awake, breathing, and following commands

Possible intraoperative problem and approach
Bronchospasm: increase inspired oxygen and inhaled aesthetic concentrations, decrease surgical stimulation if possible, administer albuterol through endotracheal tube (5-10 puffs), adjust ventilator to maximize expiratory flow

Postoperative Phase
Postoperative pain control: patient-controlled analgesia – hydromorphone, 0.2 mg IV; 6-minute lock-out, no basal rate
Disposition: postanesthesia care unit, then hospital ward*Nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking drug choices include rocuronium, vecuronium, pancuronium, atracurium, and cisatracurium.

*Nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking drug choices include rocuronium, vecuronium, pancuronium, atracurium, and cisatracurium.

Source : Ronald DM & Manuel CP Jr 2011, Basics Of Anaesthesia, 6th edn, Elsevier Saunders, Philadelphia, PA, USA

Do take note that sometime the anaesthesia plan may require modification of the plan which may include a specific requirement for an individual patient and thus may have implications for preparing additional equipment in the operating room for example, special equipment that may be kept in a cart dedicated to difficult airway management or in another instance, the patient’s responses to anaesthesia and surgery may also cause the anaesthesia plan to be adjusted.

When each patient’s anaesthesia care is planned and documented in the patient’s record, then you can be sure that medical record fully meets the two requirements of JCI Standard ASC.5

References:
Joint Commission International 2010, Joint Commission International Accreditation Standards For Hospitals, 4th edn, JCI, USA

Michelle, AG & Mary, JB 2011, Essentials of Health Information Management: Principles and Practices, 2nd edn, Delmar, Cengage Learning, NY, USA

Ronald, DM & Manuel, CP Jr 2011, Basics Of Anaesthesia, 6th edn, Elsevier Saunders, Philadelphia, PA, USA