Documentation Guidelines for Amended Records - JF Part B
Documentation Guidelines for Amended Medical Records
Elements of a Complete Medical Record
When records are requested, it is important that you send all associated documentation that supports the services billed within the timeframe designated in the written request. Sometimes that information may come from a visit or test performed earlier than the claim in question. Elements of a complete medical record may include:
- Physician orders and/or certifications of medical necessity
- Patient questionnaires associated with physician services
- Progress notes of another provider that are referenced in your own note
- Treatment logs
- Related professional consultation reports
- Procedure, lab, x-ray and diagnostic reports
- Billing provider notes for billed date of service
Amended Medical Records
Late entries, addendums, or corrections to a medical record are legitimate occurrences in documentation of clinical services. A late entry, an addendum or a correction to the medical record, bears the current date of that entry and is signed by the person making the addition or change.
Late Entry: A late entry supplies additional information that was omitted from the original entry. The late entry bears the current date, is added as soon as possible, is written only if the person documenting has total recall of the omitted information and signs the late entry.
Example: A late entry following treatment of multiple trauma might add: "The left foot was noted to be abraded laterally. John Doe MD 06/15/09"
Addendum: An addendum is used to provide information that was not available at the time of the original entry. The addendum should also be timely and bear the current date and reason for the addition or clarification of information being added to the medical record and be signed by the person making the addendum.
Example: An addendum could note: "The chest x-ray report was reviewed and showed an enlarged cardiac silhouette. John Doe MD 06/15/09"
Correction: When making a correction to the medical record, never write over, or otherwise obliterate the passage when an entry to a medical record is made in error. Draw a single line through the erroneous information, keeping the original entry legible. Sign or initial and date the deletion, stating the reason for correction above or in the margin. Document the correct information on the next line or space with the current date and time, making reference back to the original entry.
Correction of electronic records should follow the same principles of tracking both the original entry and the correction with the current date, time, reason for the change and initials of person making the correction. When a hard copy is generated from an electronic record, both records must show the correction. Any corrected record submitted must make clear the specific change made, the date of the change, and the identity of the person making that entry.
Resources
- Section 1833(e) Title XVIII of the Social Security Act (No Documentation)
- Section 1842(a)(1)(c) of the Social Security Act (Carrier Audits)
- Section 1862(a)(1)(A) of Title XVIII of the Social Security Act (Medical Necessity)
- Schott, Sharon. "How Poor Documentation Does Damage in the Court Room." Journal of AHIMA 74, no. 4 (April 2003): 20-24
- Dougherty, Michelle. "Maintaining a Legally Sound Health Record." Journal of AHIMA 73, no. 8 (April 2003): 64A-G