User login
Emergent medication use is indicated in numerous clinical scenarios, including psychotic agitation, physical aggression, or withdrawal from substances. While there is plenty of literature to help clinicians with medical record documentation in various other settings,1-3 there is minimal guidance on how to document your rationale for using psychiatric medications in emergency situations.
I have designed a template for structuring progress notes that has helped me to quickly explain my decision-making for using psychiatric medications during an emergency. When writing a progress note to justify your clinical actions in these situations, ask yourself the following questions:
- What symptoms/behaviors needed to be emergently treated? (Use direct quotes from the patient.)
- Which nonpharmacologic interventions were attempted prior to using a medication?
- Does the patient have any medication allergies? (Document if you were unable to assess for allergies.)
- Why did you select this specific route for medication administration?
- What was your rationale for using the specific medication(s)?
- What was the rationale for the selected dose?
- Who was present during medication administration?
- Which (if any) concurrent interventions did you order during or after medication administration?
- Were any safety follow-up checks ordered after medication administration?
A sample progress note
To help illustrate how these questions could guide a clinician’s writing, the following is a progress note I created using this template:
“Patient woke up at 3:15
1. Gutheil TG. Fundamentals of medical record documentation. Psychiatry (Edgmont). 2004;1(3):26-28.
2. Guth T, Morrissey T. Medical documentation and ED charting. Clerkship Directors in Emergency Medicine. https://saem.org/cdem/education/online-education/m3-curriculum/documentation/documentation-of-em-encounters. Updated 2015. Accessed October 10, 2019.
3. Aftab A, Latorre S, Nagle-Yang S. Effective note-writing: a primer for psychiatry residents. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/couch-crisis/effective-note-writing-primer-psychiatry-residents. Published January 13, 2017. Accessed October 10, 2019.
Emergent medication use is indicated in numerous clinical scenarios, including psychotic agitation, physical aggression, or withdrawal from substances. While there is plenty of literature to help clinicians with medical record documentation in various other settings,1-3 there is minimal guidance on how to document your rationale for using psychiatric medications in emergency situations.
I have designed a template for structuring progress notes that has helped me to quickly explain my decision-making for using psychiatric medications during an emergency. When writing a progress note to justify your clinical actions in these situations, ask yourself the following questions:
- What symptoms/behaviors needed to be emergently treated? (Use direct quotes from the patient.)
- Which nonpharmacologic interventions were attempted prior to using a medication?
- Does the patient have any medication allergies? (Document if you were unable to assess for allergies.)
- Why did you select this specific route for medication administration?
- What was your rationale for using the specific medication(s)?
- What was the rationale for the selected dose?
- Who was present during medication administration?
- Which (if any) concurrent interventions did you order during or after medication administration?
- Were any safety follow-up checks ordered after medication administration?
A sample progress note
To help illustrate how these questions could guide a clinician’s writing, the following is a progress note I created using this template:
“Patient woke up at 3:15
Emergent medication use is indicated in numerous clinical scenarios, including psychotic agitation, physical aggression, or withdrawal from substances. While there is plenty of literature to help clinicians with medical record documentation in various other settings,1-3 there is minimal guidance on how to document your rationale for using psychiatric medications in emergency situations.
I have designed a template for structuring progress notes that has helped me to quickly explain my decision-making for using psychiatric medications during an emergency. When writing a progress note to justify your clinical actions in these situations, ask yourself the following questions:
- What symptoms/behaviors needed to be emergently treated? (Use direct quotes from the patient.)
- Which nonpharmacologic interventions were attempted prior to using a medication?
- Does the patient have any medication allergies? (Document if you were unable to assess for allergies.)
- Why did you select this specific route for medication administration?
- What was your rationale for using the specific medication(s)?
- What was the rationale for the selected dose?
- Who was present during medication administration?
- Which (if any) concurrent interventions did you order during or after medication administration?
- Were any safety follow-up checks ordered after medication administration?
A sample progress note
To help illustrate how these questions could guide a clinician’s writing, the following is a progress note I created using this template:
“Patient woke up at 3:15
1. Gutheil TG. Fundamentals of medical record documentation. Psychiatry (Edgmont). 2004;1(3):26-28.
2. Guth T, Morrissey T. Medical documentation and ED charting. Clerkship Directors in Emergency Medicine. https://saem.org/cdem/education/online-education/m3-curriculum/documentation/documentation-of-em-encounters. Updated 2015. Accessed October 10, 2019.
3. Aftab A, Latorre S, Nagle-Yang S. Effective note-writing: a primer for psychiatry residents. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/couch-crisis/effective-note-writing-primer-psychiatry-residents. Published January 13, 2017. Accessed October 10, 2019.
1. Gutheil TG. Fundamentals of medical record documentation. Psychiatry (Edgmont). 2004;1(3):26-28.
2. Guth T, Morrissey T. Medical documentation and ED charting. Clerkship Directors in Emergency Medicine. https://saem.org/cdem/education/online-education/m3-curriculum/documentation/documentation-of-em-encounters. Updated 2015. Accessed October 10, 2019.
3. Aftab A, Latorre S, Nagle-Yang S. Effective note-writing: a primer for psychiatry residents. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/couch-crisis/effective-note-writing-primer-psychiatry-residents. Published January 13, 2017. Accessed October 10, 2019.