Medicolegal Issues

Successfully navigating the 15-minute ‘med check’

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

How to reduce malpractice risk with better documentation.

Tips to make documentation easier, faster, and more satisfying” (Current Psychiatry, February 2008), I discussed documentation techniques at length. Table 3 reprints principles that may be especially helpful in practices that consist primarily of med checks.

Table 3

Keys to better documentation

TechniqueBenefits
Time and date your notesAfter an adverse event, establish when you saw the patient, recorded findings, wrote orders, reviewed lab results, or discussed problems with others can make a big difference in how your care is viewed
Sooner is betterCharting completed long after an adverse event occurred is vulnerable to accusations of fabrication
Brief quotesVerbatim statements (‘I’ve never considered suicide’) quickly convey key factors in your therapeutic decision
Dictate or use speech recognition softwareYou speak faster than you write allowing you to document more
Provide handoutsPatients often do not remember or understand much of medication instructions doctors tell them
Use rating scalesRecord more information in a scientifically validated format
Try macros and templatesThese reduce documentation time and help you remember to cover everything you should
Source: Adapted from reference 18

Acknowledgment

Thanks to James Knoll IV, MD for his helpful input on this article.

Recommended Reading

Connecting the dots: Psychiatrists are virtuosos
MDedge Psychiatry
EBM can obscure realities
MDedge Psychiatry
Splitting treatment: How to limit liability risk when you share a patient’s care
MDedge Psychiatry
Caring and respect can reduce malpractice risk
MDedge Psychiatry
Consider cost and efficacy
MDedge Psychiatry
Thick chart syndrome: Treatment resistance is our greatest challenge
MDedge Psychiatry
A psychiatric manifesto
MDedge Psychiatry
IMAGINE better clinical decision-making
MDedge Psychiatry
Combination therapy is here to stay
MDedge Psychiatry
Are you ready to testify? 3 ways to prepare
MDedge Psychiatry