2. To establish guidelines and the responsibilities
for various disciplines who depend on the
medical record as the primary tool for
communicating information to patient care.
To provide standards for uniform documentation
practice by all physicians.
To ensure competent records toward fulfillment
of medico-legal responsibility of physicians.
3.
4. Patient Care Orders are: the
physician prescriptions, or
authorization for the diagnostic or
treatment service to a patient.
5. Most Important Communication piece
Culmination of all skills (Assessment, Analysis,
Plan)
Initiates all care
Historical record; Sequence of events
Communication to all caregivers
Communication to lawyers
6. Entries may be made into the medical record by:
Physicians, Nurses, Pharmacists, RT, Dietician,
Care Coordinator, Special Ed Teachers, Dentists,
Midwives, Paramedic, Social Worker, Recreation
Specialist, Radiology tech.
Your entries communicate to all of these
professionals
7. The following health care professionals may
accept and document patient care orders:-
1. Professional nurses/ midwives,
2. Dieticians,
3. RT,
4. Pharmacist,
5. Physical/occupational/speech therapist,
6. Radiology technicians,
7. Dental therapist,
8. Orthopedic technicians,
9. Designated CT and MRI technicians.
8. If the individual authorized to accept patient care
orders believes that any orders fail outside
acceptable standards of patient care, or is
otherwise inappropriate, unreasonable, that
person must refuse to execute it.
They must promptly inform the physician why
they refuse the order.
If the order remains unchanged, the individual
should notify their supervisors, and a physician
at the next higher level.
9.
10. physicians order are documented in consistent
location with in medical record
Physicians orders include medication and non-
medication orders.
Must be written and signed by the physicians
before they can be executed, except in case of
V/O and T/O.
Shall be precise e.g.; PRN orders shall estate
the indication for administration of the drug.
11. Only forms approved by the Medical Records
Committee shall be used in the record
All entries must be legible with author clearly
labeled, with date(date-month-year sequence)
and time(24-hours clock system).
Every page shall contain patient’s name and
medical record number.
Who is responsible for this? YOU, and anyone
writing on the page.
12. Continuous; lines/space, if skipped, should be
marked through.
Made in black or dark blue ink.
Only approved abbreviations and symbols may
be used.
13. 1) Timely
2) Clear
3) Concise
4) Organized
5) Legible
Re-evaluate as frequently as required for patient
condition changes
14. A physician shall not change the orders or plan
of management of another physician, unless:-
1. Specifically requested or authorized by the
attending physician.
2. The chief of service deems it necessary,
urgent and in the patients best interest to do
so.
15. When an error occurs, a line should be drawn
through it and the word error written on the line
next to it. This is followed by name, title, date
and time.
Then, re-write proper information.
No correction fluid is to be used.
Don't use eraser
16. Use of identification stamp is encouraged.
When stamp is used, a signature must still be
present above the stamp.
19. The procedure:
1. Listen to the order,
2. Repeat the patient’s name, file number, room
number, diagnosis and complete order back to
the physician to ensure accuracy.
3. Record the order,
4. Record the date and time,
Sign your name and badge number, before the
end of the next calendar day after the order was
given.
20. V/O are appropriate in the following situations:-
1. Emergency.
2. If practitioner placing the order is physically
unavailable and order has urgency.
3. If physician is performing a procedure.
Must be signed, dated and timed within 48 hours
(except Med orders and restraint orders which
are 24)
21. Cannot be used for:
1) Chemo,
2) DNR/Code Status;
3) Post OP,
4) PCA;
5) Hyper- alimentation;
6) Withdrawal of life support;
7) Heparin;
8) Initial parenteral orders of narcotics
22. Admit to : Ward, ICU, or preoperative room.
Diagnosis: Primary Diagnosis, Other Diagnoses
Indication and Intended operation.
Condition: Stable
Nursing Vital Signs:
Frequency of vital signs;
Input and output recording;
Neurological or vascular checks.
23. Notify physician if blood pressure <90/60,
>160/110; pulse >110; pulse <60; temperature
>38.5; urine output <35 cc/h for >2 hours;
respiratory rate >30.
Activity level (precautions, bed rest, elevation of
bed, weight bearing restrictions, rotation bed,
bathroom privileges )
Allergies: No known allergies
Diet: NPO
24. Medications:
Antibiotics to be initiated immediately
preoperatively; Additional dose during operation
and 1 dose of antibiotic postoperatively.
Must be on Doctors order form or other
approved form (Heparin, Lovenox and Protonix)
Include all Drug; Strength; Route; Frequency
All strengths and volume in metric system
25. Parameters required for PRN (fever, pain)
only one range of dose per statement,( eg;
Morphine xx - xx every 4 hours for pain)
All medication orders must be individually
reordered following surgery. “Resume” orders
are not acceptable
“Resume Home Meds” cannot be used.
Any ambiguous or illegible order will be required
to be re-written prior to filling the medication
26. All home medications brought into the hospital
to be utilized by inpatients will be verified first by
pharmacy as the proper medication prior to
administration.
27. Labs and Special X-Rays:
Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, INR/PTT, CBC,
platelet count, UA, ABG, pulmonary function
tests.
Chest x-ray (if >35 yrs old),
ECG (if older then 35 yrs old or if cardiovascular
disease).
Type and cross for an appropriate number of
units of blood.
28.
29. Transfer:
From recovery room to surgical ward when
stable.
Vital Signs: q4h, I&O q4h x 24h.
Activity:
Bed rest; ambulate in 6-8 hours if
appropriate.
Incentive spirometer q1h while awake.
IV Fluids:
IV D5 LR or D5 1/2 NS at 125 cc/h
30. Diet:
NPO x 8h then sips of water.
Advance from clear liquids to regular diet as
tolerated.
Medications:
1. Cefazolin 1 gm IV q8h x 3 doses;
2. Meperidine 50 mg IV/IM q3-4h prn pain
Laboratory Evaluation: CBC, Chest x-ray in AM
if indicated.
31. Post-operative, pre-admission, pre-
procedures orders are valid for 30
days in the event the surgery,
admission, procedure is delayed, and
as long as patient’s conditions
unchanged.
32. Are preprinted sets of instructions for the patient
care which can be initiated by a nurse in the
absence of physician order.
Amendment may be made to the pre-printed
orders by a physician in writing, verbally or over
the telephone.
Must be signed by the attending physician within
the next calendar day.
33.
34. 1) Its not so easy. Slow down. Re-read what you
wrote. Ask for help.
2) Watch unapproved abbreviations
3) 5 Basics (Pt, drug, dose, route, time)
4) PRN need a rationale
5) Don’t use two ranges in same order (20-40 mg
q 4-6 hours)
6) Legibility