One facility redevelops an assessment tool to ensure documentation
Case Management Monthly, September 1, 2009
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In January 2007, the University of North Carolina (UNC) Hospitals in Chapel Hill implemented a standardized, electronic assessment tool to aid its case managers in providing thorough and consistent patient assessments.
Beverly Wagner, RN, BSN, CCM, ACM, clinical care management educator at UNC Hospitals, and colleagues developed the tool with staff members to ensure their buy-in. The result was the brief assessment tool, or BAT. The BAT made documentation easier and more consistent; patient assessment documentation rose immediately.
“We had a nice surge from about 8% of discharges having measurable assessment documentation to about 30%,” says Wagner. “But we kind of hit a plateau there.” Interest waned in the BAT because it didn’t accommodate frequently admitted patients or patients with psychosocial and minimal case management needs, Wagner says. That’s why UNC Hospitals put a team together and retired the BAT. It then created the CAT, the RAT, and the ScAT.
This is an excerpt from a member only article. To read the article in its entirety, please login or subscribe to Case Management Monthly.
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