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2007-08-10 01:17:03 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Medicine

4 answers

Traditionally, when doctors see patients in hospital, they handwrite a progress note in the chart. Eventually, medicine will follow everybody else and have electronic records with those notes entered into a computer (present in some places now). In between are those dictated by the physician and transcribed (typed) for him. This system has been pretty popular for twenty years or so.

2007-08-10 04:05:43 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There are a variety of medical reports created every day in physician offices, clinics, and hospitals. A Medical Transcriptionist needs to be familiar with the medical reports dictated in each work setting.

Types of reports dictated in private physician practice include:

• Office chart notes
• Letters
• Initial office evaluations
• History and physical examinations

Types of reports dictated in hospitals and medical centers are numerous. The reports include dictations from a basic four which are:

• History and Physical Examinations
• Consultation Reports
• Operative Reports
• Discharge Summaries

In addition to the above reports emergency department reports, hospital progress notes and diagnostic studies are often also dictated.

The chart note is also called progress note or follow-up note is dictated by the physician after talking with, meeting with, or examining a patient usually in an outpatient setting. Progress notes or chart notes are also commonly dictated on hospital inpatients.

The chart note varies in length from one sentence to one or more pages and contains:

• A concise description of the patient’s presenting problem
• Physical findings
• Physician’s plan of treatment
• May also include laboratory tests results

Doctors use numerous formats for dictated chart notes. The SOAP format is common. SOAP stands for the headings of:

• Subjective
• Objective
• Assessment
• Plan

Physicians frequently dictate letters to communicate patient information to other physicians, insurance companies, and government offices. A Medical Transcriptionist will need to be familiar with the various standard business letter formats. Employers sometimes express a preference for a specific letter format. Most commonly used is the full-block format with the parts of the letter lined up on the left margin.

The initial office evaluation is dictated after the physician sees a patient for the first time and contains about the same information as the history and physical examination. However, a physical examination report in an initial office evaluation may be limited to specific areas of disease.

2007-08-10 08:39:36 · answer #2 · answered by pahini5 2 · 0 0

taking a recorded version that a doctor records (into a tape recorder) and converting it on to a legal form to become part of a medical record

2007-08-11 23:36:34 · answer #3 · answered by veronicawilliams1969 3 · 0 0

It is a form of short hand. They do it court rooms and doctors use them.

2007-08-10 08:23:00 · answer #4 · answered by Danny K 5 · 0 0

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