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Improving Medicare Documentation
with Electronic Medical Records
An electronic medical record
(EMR) system can help any medical practice improve the quality of
its documentation and record keeping. For practices that serve Medicare
patients, an EMR can also help facilitate better Medicare Risk Adjustment
(MRA) coding practices and prepare practices for periodic reviews
and data validations.
An EMR system can help practices avoid some of the
most prevalent errors in MRA documentation and coding. For example,
an EMR can support a practice’s proper use of ICD-9-CM diagnosis
codes to the highest level of specificity, as is required under
MRA. (Some systems will even prefill an ICD-9-CM code based on the
diagnosis information entered.) In addition, an EMR system eliminates
legibility problems, which medical record reviewers consistently
note as a barrier to good coding practices.
However, using an EMR doesn’t eliminate all
potential documentation errors. Humana’s MRA medical record
review team offers the following recommendations for practices using
an EMR:
- Everyone in the office needs to be fully trained and
use the system in a consistent manner. An EMR is a significant
investment; make sure the staff is using it to its full potential
and that the practice is gaining efficiencies through its proper
use.
- Documentation is only as good as what is being entered.
Staff members entering data into the system still need to verify
that information is complete and accurate. That includes:
- Ensuring that electronic signatures are included.
- Verifying that selections from drop-down boxes match information
entered in other areas and that the selection is appropriate for
that patient encounter.
- Checking selected ICD-9-CM codes for accuracy and appropriateness.
EMR systems don’t simply provide record-keeping
benefits; they can also improve patient care by reducing potential
for medical errors and providing clinical staff with more time for
patient interaction. Clinical care staff benefits from faster and
easier access to patient records and lab results, and physicians
can access information from a hospital, clinic or off-site.
For more information about making the EMR
decision, visit the American Health Information Management Association
Web site at www.ahima.org/medicalcoding/electronic_medical_records.asp.
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