front 1 Recovery Room Record | back 1 Designed to care for patients immediately after surgery or anesthesia. TJC requires this form to include patient's condition and level of consciousness when entering and leaving the unit; vital signs; status reports of infusions, surgical dressings, tubes, catheters, or drains; and any treatment provided in the unit. |
front 2 Pathology Report | back 2 Documents tissue examinations that may be microscopic in addition to being macroscopic (gross). The tissue or object is identified, a clinical diagnosis is provided, and an opinion requested. |
front 3 Operative Report | back 3 Must be included in records of all patients who undergo surgery. Top portion provides identifying data, including the names of the surgeon and any assistants, and the date, duration, and name of the procedure. A postoperative diagnosis is required and a preoperative diagnosis is also desirable for comparison. Body of report contains full description of the surgical approach, normal and abnormal findings, organs explored, procedures, implants, ligatures, sutures, and the number of packs, drains, and sponges used, and the condition of the patient at the conclusion of surgery. |
front 4 Discharge Summary | back 4 Reviews the patient's course. Begins with the reason for admission and includes chronological descriptions of significant findings from examinations, tests, procedures, and therapies performed along with the patient's response. Details regarding discharge are also recorded, including the condition on discharge related to the condition on admission and follow-up instructions specifying medications, level of physical activity, diet, follow-up care, and patient teaching. Attending physician records this. |
front 5 MDS Minimum Data Set | back 5 Standardized, comprehensive assessment instrument that CMS requires be completed for residents of skilled nursing facilities. Collects administrative and clinical information. States have the option of having supplemental data collected with the approval of CMS. •CMS requires this to be completed CMS uses the data for Long-Term Care. |
front 6 UHDDS Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set | back 6 Promulgated by the secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare in 1974, as a minimum, common core data on individual hospital discharges in the Medicare and Medicaid programs. |
front 7 Abbreviation List | back 7 An official list of approved abbreviations maintained by healthcare organizations, to avoid misunderstandings from either poor handwriting or the fact that many abbreviations have more than one meaning. |
front 8 Abbreviation, Acronym, and Symbol Rules | back 8 If more than one definition exists, the preferred approach is to avoid the abbreviation entirely. TJC prohibits the use of dangerous abbreviations, acronyms, and symbols in patient records. |
front 9 Progress Notes | back 9 Interval statements that document the patient's illness or condition and response to treatment as specifically as possible. Person writing the notes is responsible for recording observations about the patient's progress and response to treatment from the perspective of his profession. |
front 10 Incident Report | back 10 Reports completed by health care professionals when an incident occurs. Nonjudgmental factual accounts of the event and any consequences. Used to correct problem-prone areas and in preparation for possible legal action. Administrative documents that are not included in the patient's record. |
front 11 Interdisciplinary Patient Care Plan | back 11 The foundation around which patient care is organized. Contains input from the unique perspective of each discipline involved in patient's care. Includes assessment, statement of goals, identification of specific activities or strategies to achieve those goals, and periodic assessment of goal attainment. Valuable tool in evaluating both individual patient care and overall organizational patient care performance. |
front 12 Problem List | back 12 Includes specified clinical problems, a diagnosis, a summary and stressor exposure. It's an ongoing list of clinically significant health status events and factors (resolved and unresolved) in a patient's life. It is a master list of all a patient's problems or diagnoses. In a POMR, the problem list includes titles, numbers, and dates of problems and serves as a table of contents of the record. |
front 13 Transfer Record or Form | back 13 When a resident is transferred to a facility, this record provided by the hospital, physician, or other facility should accompany the patient or follow immediately. The form facilitates the continuity of care and should include reason for admission, diagnosis, current medical information, and rehabilitative potential. |
front 14 Prenatal Record or Antepartum Record | back 14 Begins in the office or clinic of the OB or midwife. Ideally started early in pregnancy, record includes a comprehensive history and physical examination with particular attention to menstrual history, reproductive history - including live births and abortions, a risk assessment, and attendance at any birth classes. Includes initial and subsequent history, physical examination, recording of clinical information, and monthly visits up to 28 weeks of gestation, biweekly visits to 36 weeks gestation, and weekly visits until the time of delivery, and routine chemical urinalysis. |
front 15 Labor and Delivery Record | back 15 This record tracks the patient form admission through delivery to the postpartum period. Evaluation is made by physician including updated history, data on contractions, status of membranes, presence of significant bleeding, time and content of the patient's last intake of food or fluid, drug intake and allergies, choice of anesthesia, and plans to breast- or bottle-feed. Mother and baby are monitored frequently. At delivery, details regarding the mother are recorded and the neonate is described - Apgar score, sex, weight, length, onset of respiration, abnormalities, and treatment to the eyes. |
front 16 Postpartum Record | back 16 Includes information about the condition of the mother after delivery. Special attention is given to assessing the lochia and condition of the breasts, fundus, and perineum as well as the postoperative status. |
front 17 History and Physical Time Frames | back 17 TJC requirements: Comprehensive H&P must must be completed and available within 24 hours - sooner if surgery is to be performed. An interval H&P is permitted as long as patient is admitted within 30 days for the same condition with any changes noted. |
front 18 Disease Index | back 18 A numerically sequenced list of diseases and conditions diagnosed in hospital patients. This is a case finding source for the cancer registry that is compiled from these codes. A listing in diagnostic code number order. |
front 19 Number Control Index | back 19 Identifies new health record numbers and the patients to whom they were assigned. |
front 20 Physician's Index | back 20 Identifies all patients treated by each doctor. A listing of cases in order by physician name or number. Because information contained in the physician's index is considered confidential, identification codes are often used rather than physicians' names. |
front 21 Patient Index | back 21 Links each patient treated in a facility with the health number under which the clinical information can be located. |
front 22 OASIS Outcome Assessment Information Set | back 22 Set of data elements that represent core items of a comprehensive assessment for an adult home-care patient. It is used to measure patient outcomes in outcome-based quality improvement. This assessment is performed on every patient who receives services from home-health agencies that participate in the Medicare or Medicaid programs. This assessment is the basis of the Home Health Prospective Payment System. |
front 23 DEEDS Data Elements for Emergency Department Systems | back 23 Set of data elements that represent core items of a comprehensive assessment for an emergency department. |
front 24 Interdisciplinary Plan of Care | back 24 The foundation around which patient care is organized because it contains input from the unique perspective of each discipline involved in the patient's care. Includes an assessment, statement of goals, identification of specific activities or strategies to achieve those goals, and periodic assessment of goal attainment. |
front 25 ONC Office of the National Coordinator for Health InformationTechnology | back 25 In 2004, President Bush created this position. This office and role within Health and Human Services (HHS) is charged with providing national leadership in support of government and private efforts to develop the standards and infrastructure to more effectively use information technology to achieve quality health care and to reduce health care costs. This person reports to the Secretary of the HHS. |
front 26 OSHA Occupational Safety and Health Administration | back 26 This group is responsible for developing standards and regulations and conducting inspections and investigations to determine compliance, and it proposes corrective actions for noncompliance in matters related to occupational safety and health. |
front 27 SOAP What is the S? | back 27 Subjective - Records what the patient states is the problem. Describes the patient’s current condition in narrative form. This section usually includes the patient’s chief complaint, or reason why they came to the physician. |
front 28 SOAP What is the O? | back 28 Objective - Records what the practitioner identifies through the history, physical examination, and diagnostic tests. Documents objective, repeatable, and traceable facts about the patient’s status. Includes: Vital signs; Findings from physical examinations, such as posture, bruising, and abnormalities; Results from laboratory; Measurements, such as age and weight of the patient. |
front 29 SOAP What is the A? | back 29 Assessment - Combines the subjective and objective into a conclusion. The Physician’s medical diagnoses for the medical visit on the given date of a note written. |
front 30 SOAP What is the P? | back 30 Plan - What approach is going to be taken to resolve the problem. This describes what the health care provider will do to treat the patient – ordering labs, referrals, procedures performed, medications prescribed, etc. |
front 31 MPI Master Patient Index | back 31 Index that identifies all patients who have been treated by the facility and lists the number associated with the name. Cross-references the patient name and medical record number. |
front 32 Operation Index | back 32 A list of all procedures that have been performed in a facility. |
front 33 Point-of-Care Service and Documentation | back 33 Allows caregivers to capture and input data where health care service is provided and may be done at the time of patient care. This system can collect data directly from monitoring devices such as those in intensive care units. It ensures that appropriate data are collected. |
front 34 Data Comprehensiveness | back 34 All data items are included. The entire scope of the data is collected, and document intentional limitations. Denotes that all data items are included. |
front 35 Data Granularity | back 35 The relative degree of detail, specificity, or size of components; in health care, _____ is often used to describe the specificity with which a diagnosis is made or how much detail is included in the workflow and process being mapped. The attributes and values of data should be defined at the correct level of detail. |
front 36 Data Precision | back 36 Data values should be just large enough to support the application of the process. |
front 37 Data Accuracy | back 37 Data are the correct values and are valid. The data represent what was intended or defined by their official source, are objective or unbiased, and comply with known standards. |
front 38 Reliability | back 38 Refers to consistency of data. |
front 39 Timeliness | back 39 Refers to data being available within a time frame helpful to the user. |
front 40 Validity | back 40 Meaning the right thing was measured. Accuracy. The accuracy of data. |
front 41 Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities CARF | back 41 Independent accrediting agency for rehab facilities. Mission is to promote the quality, value, and optimal outcomes to people with disabilities. Sets and maintains standards directed at improving quality of care, conducting research, identifying competent organizations that provide rehabilitative services, and providing an organized forum in people served, providers, and others can participate in quality improvement. This private, not-for-profit organization is committed to developing and maintaining practical, customer-focused standards to help organizations measure and improve the quality, value, and outcomes of behavioral health and medical rehabilitation programs. |
front 42 Federal Register | back 42 A Monday-Friday publication of the National Archives and Records Administration that reports regulations and legal notices issued by federal agencies, presidential proclamations and executive orders, and other documents as directed by law or public interest. CMS publishes both proposed and final rules for the Conditions of Participation for hospitals in this. |
front 43 Electronic Document-Management System EDMS System | back 43 The method used to maintain and combine paper and electronic records. One advantage is that it can help manage tasks because it can facilitate various functions that must be performed, often simultaneously or in a specific sequence. Ex: When patient is discharged, a notification is sent to an analyst that record is ready for analysis and coding. |
front 44 Computer Prescriber Order Entry CPOE | back 44 Electronic systems that support physicians and other applicable licensed healthcare professionals in developing and documenting instructions for the care of the patient, including the ordering of medications, diagnostic studies, food and nutrition, nursing services, and treatments. These systems contain some clinical decision support functionality that provides the user with standard order sets that reduce data entry time; alerts about the possibility of drug interactions, allergic reactions, or a potential overdose; warnings for potential duplicate diagnostic tests and therapies; reminders about the need to renew or discontinue an order; and other relevant information. |
front 45 Regional Health Information Organization RHIO | back 45 Organizations that are working together to develop a means of sharing health information for patient care and other uses, typically within a geographic area. Part of the development of a national health information infrastructure. |
front 46 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 OBRA 1987 | back 46 It brought attention and support to the production and dissemination of scientific and policy-relevant information that improves quality, reduces cost, and enhances effectiveness of health care and established the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). Required CMS to develop an assessment instrument to standardize the collection of SNF patient data. This instrument is the resident assessment instrument (RAI) and includes the MDS 3.0. |
front 47 Data Dictionary | back 47 A descriptive list of the data elements to be collected in an information system or database whose purpose is to ensure consistency of terminology. |
front 48 Data Element | back 48 An individual fact or measurement that is the smallest unique subset of a database. Ex: Age, gender, insurance company, or BP |
front 49 Data Set | back 49 A list of recommended data elements with uniform definitions that are relevant for a particular use. |
front 50 Accession Register | back 50 A number assigned to each case as it is entered into a cancer registry. |
front 51 Quantitative Analysis | back 51 Involves checking for the presence or absence of necessary reports and/or signatures |
front 52 Qualitative Analysis | back 52 Involves checking for documentation consistency - comparing what was written to what was actually done. |
front 53 Utilization Review | back 53 The process of evaluating the efficiency and appropriateness of health care services according to predetermined criteria. |
front 54 R-ADT System | back 54 Registration-Admission, Discharge, and Transfer System A type of Administrative information system that stores demographic and insurance information and performs functionality related to registration, admission, discharge, and transfer of patients within the organization. Tracks when a patient was registered, admitted, discharged and/or transferred. |
front 55 ORYX Initiative | back 55 A Joint Commission initiative that supports the integration of outcomes data and other performance measurement data into the accreditation process. Goal if the initiative is to foster a comprehensive, continuous, data-driven accreditation process for healthcare facilities. They want to integrate outcomes and other performance measures into the accreditation process through data collection about specific core measures. Uses nationally standardized performance measures to improve the safety and quality of healthcare. |
front 56 Core Performance Measures | back 56 Considered tools that provide an indication of an organization's performance and used by the JC within the ORYX initiative. Used to assess how well healthcare organizations provide care. Used by Joint Commission, CMS, and healthcare plans like Blue Cross. Used to determine where to focus QI activities and accreditation surveys. Sets include:
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front 57 Database | back 57 Contains the H&P in a PMOR (problem-oriented medical record) |
front 58 Initial Plan | back 58 Describes diagnostic, therapeutic, and patient education plans. |
front 59 Straight Numeric Filing Systems | back 59 Records are arranged consecutively in ascending numeric order. The number assigned to each file in the health record number. |
front 60 Terminal-Digit Filing System | back 60 Considered the most efficient system. Good for facilities with a heavy record volume. Allows for even file expansion . The last digit or group of digits is the primary unit used for filing, followed by the middle unit and the last unit of numbers. Ex: 44-37-98 98 is the primary unit, 37 is the secondary unit, and 44 is the tertiary number. 98 = file section, 37 = shelf number, 44 = folder number |
front 61 Middle-Digit Filing System | back 61 Primary digit is the middle unit of numbers, the secondary is the unit to the left, and the tertiary is the last unit. Ex: 44-37-98 37 is the primary unit, 44 is the secondary unit, and 98 is the tertiary number. 37 = file section, 44 = shelf number, 98 = folder number |
front 62 Serial-Unit Numbering System | back 62 Combines the strengths of both the Serial and the Unit Numbering Systems. Numbers are assigned in serial number (the patient gets the next available number at each encounter). However, the old record is brought forward and filed under the new number creating a unit record. |
front 63 Serial Numbering System | back 63 A patient receives a unique numerical identifier for each encounter or admission to a healthcare facility. Numbers are issued in a series with each patient receiving the next available number in the series. Each encounter is stored under its own number. Retrieval of all records is difficult and inefficient. |
front 64 Unit Numbering System | back 64 Most common in large healthcare facilities. The patient receives a unique health record number at the time of the first encounter. This is the patient's number for each subsequent encounter thereafter. In case of duplicate charts, all charts should be moved to first number given to the patient on his/her first encounter with facility. |
front 65 Conditions of Participation requires patient health records are kept for how long? | back 65 5 years |
front 66 Roll Microfilm | back 66 Open reel (roll) microfilm is either 16mm or 35mm film that wraps around a spool. It usually comes in 100foot lengths, though it can come in lengths of up to 215 feet.
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front 67 Cartridge Microfilm | back 67 Roll microfilm that has been placed in a compact plastic holder, which is self-threading in compatible retrieval equipment.
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front 68 Jacket Microfilm | back 68 A microfilm jacket is a fiche-sized acetate or polyester carrier that contains three to eight sleeves or channels into which strips or single images of either 16mm or 35mm roll micro-film are inserted. One jacket can hold up to sixty images. The top of the jacket contains an index area,which can be typed or written on. A jacket allows a file to be updated—new material can be inserted into the unused channels as it is filmed.
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front 69 Outguide | back 69 When a file is removed from the system, this is inserted in its place to alert that the file is being used. It has a small pocket into which a charge out slip can be placed to track the location of the removed file. The large pocket is used to hold documents and information that accumulates while the file is out. |
front 70 File Guide | back 70 This is used to break large numbers of records into smaller groups so you can find them faster. Like signposts on a highway, these stand out from the folders to signal major divisions in the filing system. |
front 71 Database Management System DBMS | back 71 A collection of computer programs that controls the creation, maintenance, and use of a database. It allows different application programs to access the database. It maintains the data definitions (data dictionary) for all the data elements in the database and enforces data integrity and security constraints. |
front 72 Hypertext Markup Language HTML | back 72 A standardized system for tagging text files to achieve font, color, graphic, and hyperlink effects on World Wide Web pages. |
front 73 Structured Query Language SQL | back 73 Used to store and retrieve data in relational databases. It gives the information system the ability to query and report on data and to insert, update, and delete data from the data base. A common language used in data definition and data manipulation. A fourth generation computer language that includes both Data Definition Language (DDL) (a standard for commands that define the different structures in a database. DDL statements create, modify, and remove database objects such as tables, indexes, and users) and Data Manipulation Language (DML) (a family of syntax elements similar to a computer programming language used for selecting, inserting, deleting and updating data in a database) components and is used to create and manipulate relational databases. |
front 74 Extensible Markup Language XML | back 74 A markup language that defines a set of rules for encoding documents in a format which is both human-readable and machine-readable. Designed to describe data, not to display data. |
front 75 Executive Information Systems EIS | back 75 A type of decision support system used by high-level managers that draws data from the organization's other databases. An information system designed to combine financial and clinical information for use in the management of business affairs of a healthcare organization. A type of management information system intended to facilitate and support the information and decision-making needs of senior executives by providing easy access to both internal and external information relevant to meeting the strategic goals of an organization. Provides information on the census, updates the master patient index, and distributes demographic data. |
front 76 Management Information System MIS | back 76 Collects, stores, modifies, and retrieves the transactions of an organization to help middle managers make decisions about their departments' objectives. Data might include
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front 77 Financial Information System FIS | back 77 The accounting/financial programs and data necessary for running a healthcare facility. Include functions such as payroll preparation and accounting; accounts payable; patient accounting, including billing and accounts receivable processing; cost accounting; general ledger accounting; budgeting; and financial statement preparation. |
front 78 Internet | back 78 An international network of computer servers that provides individual users with communications channels and access to software and information repositories worldwide. |
front 79 Intranet | back 79 A computer network that uses Internet Protocol technology to share information, operational systems, or computing services within an organization. |
front 80 Extranet | back 80 A systems of connections of private Internet networks outside an organization's firewall that uses Internet technology to enable collaborative applications among enterprises. |
front 81 Clinical Information System CIS | back 81 A category of a healthcare information system that includes systems that directly support patient care. Designed primarily to support patient care by providing healthcare practitioners with access to timely, complete, and relevant clinical information that is used to diagnose, treat, and manage patient care. |
front 82 Interfaced System | back 82 In computing, an interface is a shared boundary across which two separate components of a computer system exchange information. The exchange can be between software, computer hardware, peripheral devices, humans and combinations of these. A large collection of clinical information systems and hospital information systems that are designed to share data without human or technical intervention. |
front 83 Integrated System | back 83 In engineering, system integration is defined as the process of bringing together the component subsystems into one system and ensuring that the subsystems function together as a system. |
front 84 Online Analytical Processing OLAP | back 84 A data access architecture that allows the user to retrieve specific information from a large volume of data. Performs multidimensional analysis of business data and provides the capability for complex calculations, trend analysis, and sophisticated data modeling. |
front 85 Clinical Data Repository CDR | back 85 A central relational database that focuses on clinical information. Helps manage data from many different sources, ancillary systems in the hospital, or other provider settings as well as from direct entry of structured data by the clinician. It can make this data readily available and process this data in CDS (clinical decision support). Limited to data retrieval. Supports the management of data for an EHR. Contains structured and unstructured data. Database optimized for for online transaction processing (OTAP). Transactions relating to patient care - lab results, enter order, post vital signs, record meds administered. Ex: You are working with a database that is created from multiple databases being stored in a single database. Good for laboratory, pharmacy, and radiology data. |
front 86 Clinical Data Warehouse CDW | back 86 A database that makes it possible to access data from multiple databases and combine the results into a single query and reporting interface. Contains structured data only. Database optimized for online analytical processing (OLAP). Analysis of data relating to a population of patients - aggregate data to identify patterns, compare measures, data mining, predictive modeling. |
front 87 Application Service Provider Model | back 87 A business that provides computer-based services to customers. A third party service company that delivers, manages, and remotely hosts standardized applications software via a network through an outsourcing contract based on fixed monthly usage or transaction-based pricing. Good for large facilities. |
front 88 Light Pen | back 88 A handheld, penlike photosensitive device held to the display screen of a computer terminal for passing information to the computer. A handheld, light-emitting device used for reading bar codes. |
front 89 International Classification on Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF) | back 89 A classification system that is structured around
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front 90 Systematized Nomenclature of Human and Veterinary Medicine international (SNOMED) | back 90 A coding system, controlled vocabulary, classifications system, clinical reference terminology, and thesaurus. Based on SNOP. |
front 91 Systematized Nomenclature of Pathology (SNOP) | back 91 Organizes information from surgical pathology reports. |
front 92 Logical Observation Identifiers, Names and Codes (LOINC) | back 92 Used to represent laboratory and clinical measurements, survey questions, clinical documents, and diagnostic reports. |
front 93 National Practitioner Data Bank | back 93 A data bank established by the federal government through the 1986 Healthcare Quality Improvement Act that contains information on professional review actions taken against physicians and other licensed healthcare practitioners, which healthcare organizations are required to check as part of the credentialing process. |
front 94 Healthcare Quality Improvement Program History | back 94 Instituted in 1992 by CMS. Original mission was to promote the quality, effectiveness, and efficiency of services to Medicare beneficiaries. It was to
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front 95 Healthcare Quality Improvement Program Today | back 95 Today's approach to improving health of beneficiaries involves the analysis of patterns of care to promote changes in the healthcare delivery system. Now focuses on 6 clinical priority areas:
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front 96 MEDPAR Medicare Provider Analysis and Review | back 96 A collection of data from reimbursement claims submitted to the Medicare program by acute care hospitals and skilled nursing facilities that is used to evaluate the quality and effectiveness of the care being provided. Made up of acute care hospital and skilled nursing facility claims for all Medicare claims. It is frequently used for research on topics such as charges for particular types of care and MS-DRGs. The limitation of this data for research purposes is that the file contains only Medicare patients. |
front 97 Vital Statistics | back 97 Data related to births, deaths, marriages, and fetal deaths. |
front 98 RxNorm | back 98 A clinical drug nomenclature developed by the FDA, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and HL7 to provide standard names for clinical drugs and administered dose forms. |
front 99 Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine Clinical Terminology (SNOMED CT) | back 99 A standardized vocabulary, sometimes referred to as a controlled reference terminology. A systematized, multiaxial, and hierarchically organized nomenclature of medically useful terms. A comprehensive clinical terminology. The most comprehensive controlled vocabulary. |
front 100 Standard Nomenclature of Disease and Operation SDNO | back 100 The first medical nomenclature to be universally accepted in the United States |
front 101 Unified Medical Language System UMLS | back 101 A project sponsored by the National Library of Medicine. Provides a way to integrate biomedical concepts from a variety of sources to show their relationships. This process allows links to be made between different information systems for purposes such as electronic health record systems. Meant to be read by machines - not humans. |
front 102 CPT Current Procedural Terminology | back 102 A nomenclature of codes and medical terms that provides standard terminology for reporting physicians' services for third-party reimbursement. Can be used to gather stats for outpatient surgical services. |
front 103 HCPCS | back 103 An alphanumeric classification system that identifies healthcare procedures, equipment, and supplies for claim submission purposes. An umbrella for all the coding levels below it. |
front 104 Level I HCPCS Codes | back 104 Maintained by AMA - Called CPT codes CPT Codes used for physicians' services and hospital outpatient coding. Identifies surgical procedures, office visits, lab services. Updated annually, effective January 1. 5 Numeric Characters The umbrella for Category I, II, and III codes |
front 105 Level II HCPCS Codes | back 105 Maintained by CMS - Called HCPCS codes or National Codes Used for reporting medical services not covered in CPT - injectable drugs, chiropractic services, dental procedures, ambulance services, prosthetic devices, supplies, durable medical equipment, and selected provider services. Updated annually, effective January 1. Alpha-numeric Codes Beginning with A-V |
front 106 Category I Codes | back 106 Include the following sections
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front 107 Category II Codes | back 107 Supplemental performance tracking codes Use is optional |
front 108 Category III Codes | back 108 Temporary emerging technology codes |
front 109 Discrete Data | back 109 Separate and distinct values or observations; for example, patients in the hospital because each patient can be counted. |
front 110 Continuous Data | back 110 Data that can be measured on some scale representing values or observations that have an indefinite number of points along a continuum; for example temperature. |
front 111 Nominal Data | back 111 Values or observations that that can be labeled or named, but not ranked or measured; allow data to be coded, for example 1=Male, 2=Female. |
front 112 Ordinal Data | back 112 Values or observations that can be ranked. Ex: Patient satisfaction surveys where 1=very satisfied and 5=not satisfied |
front 113 Reliability | back 113 Refers to consistency between users of a given instrument or method. |
front 114 Validity | back 114 Assesses relevance, completeness, accuracy, and correctness. Measures how well a data collection instrument measures what it should measure. |
front 115 Frequency Polygon | back 115 A graphical device for understanding the shapes of distributions. They serve the same purpose as histograms, but are especially helpful for comparing sets of data. |
front 116 Frequency Distribution | back 116 A table or graph that displays the number of times a particular observation occurs. Examples
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front 117 Inpatient Service Day | back 117 Services received by one patient during one 24-hour period. |
front 118 Daily Inpatient Census | back 118 Total number of patients treated during a 24 hour period. The number of inpatients present at census-taking time each day, plus any inpatients who were both admitted and discharged after the census-taking time. |
front 119 Daily Census | back 119 Total number of patients treated during a 24 hour period. The number of inpatients present at census-taking time each day, plus any inpatients who were both admitted and discharged after the census-taking time. |
front 120 Inpatient Census | back 120 The number of inpatients present at any one time. A snapshot of one moment in time. |
front 121 International Classification on Functioning, Disability, and Health ICF | back 121 Approved by World Health Assembly in 2001 Created in 1980 by World Health Organization and was known as International Classification of Impairments, Disabilities, and Handicaps. Structured around the following broad concepts:
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front 122 National Drug Codes NDC | back 122 Administered by the FDA. The official data set for reporting drugs used by pharmacies. Used to maintain drug inventories in pharmacies. Codes that serve as product identifiers for human drugs, currently limited to prescription drugs, insulin, and a few selected OTC products. Identifies the vendor, product, and trade package size. |
front 123 DSM-IV-TR | back 123 Glossary of descriptions of mental disorders. All codes are fully compatible with ICD-9 & 10. |
front 124 Implant Registry | back 124 Developed for the purpose of tracking the performance of implants, including complications, deaths, and defects resulting from implants, as well as implant longevity. |
front 125 Implants | back 125 A material or substance inserted into the body. Ex: Breast implants, heart valves, or pacemakers. |
front 126 Transplant Registries | back 126 There are several types of databases
Are often national or even international in scope. |
front 127 Cancer Registries | back 127 The most common type of registry located in hospitals of all sizes and in every region of the country. There are two types: Facility-Based which is used primarily for improved patient care, also for understanding of cancer - including causes, methods of diagnosis, and treatments. Population-Based whose emphasis is on identifying trends and changes in the incidence of cancer within the area. |
front 128 Cancer Registry Reference Date | back 128 The date the registry began accessioning cases. |
front 129 International Classification of Diseases for Oncology ICD-O | back 129 Used to classify neoplasms according to their site, behavior, morphological characteristics, and how they are graded. |
front 130 National Library of Medicine NLM | back 130 The world's largest medical library and a branch of the National Institutes of Health. Produces two databases:
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front 131 MEDLINE Medical Literature, Analysis, and Retrieval System Online | back 131 Best known database from NLM. Includes bibliographic listings for publications in the areas of medicine, dentistry, nursing, pharmacy, allied health, and veterinary medicine. |
front 132 ASTM American Society for Testing and Materials | back 132 A system of standards developed primarily for various EHR management processes. Identifies structure and content for the EHR. A national organization whose purpose is to establish standards on materials, products, systems, and services. A standards development organization that develops standards for a variety of industries in the US. The _____ Technical Committee on Healthcare Informatics E31 is charged with the responsibility for developing standards related to the EHR. It was created to help communicate that information from one provider to another for referral, transfer, or discharge of the patient. |
front 133 Trauma Registry | back 133 Database on patients with severe traumatic injuries and may be used for performance improvement and research in the area of trauma care. |
front 134 Birth Defects Registry | back 134 Collect information on newborns with birth defects. Provide information on the incidence of birth defects, causes and preventions, trends, improving medical care and target interventions for preventable defects. Active surveillance systems use trained staff to identify cases in all hospitals, clinics, and other facilities through review of patient records, indexes, vital records, and hospital logs. |
front 135 READ Codes | back 135 A standard terminology for describing the care and treatment of patients. From the UK's National Health Service's Clinical Terms and is being migrated over to SNOMED CT. |
front 136 ABC Codes | back 136 Five-digit HIPAA compliant alpha codes (e.g., AAAAA) used by licensed and non-licensed healthcare practitioners on standard healthcare claim forms (e.g., CMS 1500 Form) to describe services, remedies and/or supply items provided and/or used during patient visits. Contain both a short description and an expanded definition of the service, remedy and/or supply item. |
front 137 SPECIALIST Lexicon | back 137 One of three of the UMLS components - Metathesaurus, Semantic Network, and this one. It includes commonly occurring English words and biomedical vocabulary. The entry for each word or term records the syntactic, morphological, and orthographic information used with associated NLP (Natural Language Processing) tools. |
front 138 Secondary Data Source | back 138 Data derived from the primary patient record. Examples
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front 139 Secondary Data | back 139 The information that is generated from the patient record. Why it is collected
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front 140 CPT Level I Modifiers Uses | back 140
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front 141 CPT Level II Modifier Uses | back 141
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front 142 North American Nursing Diagnosis Association NANDA | back 142 Nursing vocabulary used to develop, refine, and promote terminology that accurately reflects nurses' clinical judgements. Used to classify nursing diagnoses in all nursing settings and is terminology used designed to define patient responses, document care for reimbursement, and to allow for the inclusion of nursing terminology in building clinical EHRs. |
front 143 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project HCUP | back 143 A group of healthcare databases and related software tools developed through collaboration by the federal and state governments and healthcare industry to create a national information resource for patient-level healthcare data. It is an initiative of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) The Nation’s most comprehensive source of hospital data, including information on in-patient care, ambulatory care, and emergency department visits. It enables researchers, insurers, policymakers and others to study health care delivery and patient outcomes over time, and at the national, regional, State, and community levels. |
front 144 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality AHRQ | back 144 Agency most involved in health services research. Looks at issues related to the efficiency and effectiveness of the healthcare delivery system, disease protocols, and guidelines for improved disease outcomes. |
front 145 Record-Over-Record Benchmarking | back 145 Method of calculating errors in a coding audit that allows benchmarking with other hospitals, and permits that reviewer to track errors by case type. This method of calculating errors considers each health record coded incorrectly as one error. The advantages are
Disadvantages
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front 146 Radiology Professional Component | back 146 Describes the services of a physician who supervises the taking of the x-ray film and the interpretation of the results. |
front 147 Radiology Technical Component | back 147 Describes the services of the person who uses the equipment, the film, and other supplies. |
front 148 Radiology Global Component | back 148 Describes the combination of the professional and technical components. |
front 149 Topography of Neoplasms | back 149 Site of the neoplasm |
front 150 Morphology of Neoplasms | back 150 Cell structure and form of neoplasm |
front 151 Grading of Neoplasms | back 151 Variation from normal tissue of neoplasms |
front 152 Differentiation of Neoplasms | back 152 Another term for variation from normal tissue of neoplasms. |
front 153 Data Dictionary | back 153 A descriptive list of the data elements to be collected in an information system or database whose purpose is to ensure consistency of terminology. It ensures each piece of data can mean only one thing. |
front 154 Clinical Vocabulary | back 154 A formally recognized list of preferred medical terms. A list or collection of all clinical words or phrases with their meanings. |
front 155 PEG Procedure | back 155 A safe and effective way to provide food, liquids and medications (when appropriate) directly into the stomach through a tube. |
front 156 General Equivalency Mappings GEMS | back 156 Mappings between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM developed and released by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) to facilitate the transition from one code set to another. |
front 157 Skilled Nursing Facility SNF | back 157 Assessment Instrument is MDS (Minimum Data Set). Case-Mix Management or Diagnosis Grouping is RUG (Resource Utilization Group). |
front 158 Resource Utilization Group RUG | back 158 Classification for resources used. Patients are classified into 1 of 66 possible groups based on info from MDS. There are 52 Upper Groups and 14 Lower Groups. These subsequently classify residents into 7 payment categories. |
front 159 Ambulatory Payment Classification APC | back 159 Case-Mix Management or Diagnosis Grouping used in ASCs (Ambulatory Surgical Centers). OPPS (Outpatient Prospective Payment System) or HOPPS (Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System) used for reimbursement. Payment status indicator "N" means payment is packaged into the payment for other services. Based on CPT and HCPCS coding. Clinical lab services are excluded under OPPS/HOPPS and this methodology. |
front 160 Home Health | back 160 Diagnosis Grouping or Case-Mix Management System used is Home Health Resource Group (HHRG). Assessment Instrument is OASIS Coding is HIPPS Claim Submission is HAVEN |
front 161 Outpatient Prospective Payment System Packaged Items OPPS | back 161
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front 162 RBRVS | back 162 A system of classifying health services based on the cost of furnishing physician services in different settings, the skill and training levels required to perform the services, and the time and risk involved. Fee-for-service payment system. Payment system for physicians and some other health professionals. Payments based on 3 components Coding used is HCPCS or CPT Formula is (Work RVU)(Work GPCI) + |
front 163 Ambulatory Patient Group APG | back 163 A visit based classification that describes the amount and type of resources consumed during the visit. These are codes that go into the APC. |
front 164 Nonparticipating Providers or nonPARs | back 164 Providers who do not sign a participation agreement with MEDICARE. If they accept assignment, they are paid 95% of the MEDICARE payment a participating provider would receive. If they do not accept assignment then the provider is subject to Medicare's limiting charge rule which states providers may not charge a patient more than 115% of the nonparticipating fee schedule. The patient pays the provider and Medicare reimburses the patient. For examples see pic |
front 165 Accept Assignment | back 165 The provider accepts, as payment in full, the allowed charge from the fee schedule from Medicare. They cannot and will not bill the patient the balance. Ex: Bill is $500 but the fee schedule allows $300 in reimbursement. The provider will not bill the patient for the remaining $200. |
front 166 Balance Billing | back 166 Billing the patient for the amount not covered by insurance. |
front 167 Remittance Advice | back 167 Statement sent the provider explaining payments made by third party payers |
front 168 MS-DRG | back 168 Has 25 major diagnostic categories divided into surgical and medical partitions. Type of a case mix group (CMG) that puts patients into groups based on the amount of resources used. Only one is assigned per inpatient. Developed by CMS for inpatient hospital care to Medicare patients. Facility is reimbursed a set fee for each group. |
front 169 Electronic Data Interchange EDI | back 169 A standard transmission format using strings of data for business information communicated among the computer systems of independent organizations. The electronic (computer-to-computer) exchange of data. Provides the ability to edit, submit, and pay healthcare claims by way of electronic transfer. |
front 170 Health Information Exchange HIE | back 170 A plan in which health information is shared among providers. Also for facilities that have no relation with each other. Formally Regional Health Information Organizations. |
front 171 Encoder | back 171 Specialty software used to facilitate the assignment of diagnostic and procedural codes according to the rules of the coding system. |
front 172 Grouper | back 172 Computer program that uses specific data elements to assign patients, clients, or residents to groups, categories, or classes. Used to assign patients to case-mix groups and MS-DRGs for reimbursement. |
front 173 Scrubber | back 173 An internal auditing system that reviews claims for errors before they are sent for payment. Types of Errors They Can Find
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front 174 UB-04 | back 174 Billing form used by facilities to submit claims for payment. The single standardized Medicare form for standardized uniform billing, for hospital inpatients and outpatients. Also used by third party payers and most hospitals. |
front 175 CMS-1500 | back 175 Billing form used by physicians and other noninstitutional providers and suppliers to submit claims for payment. |
front 176 CMS-1491 | back 176 Billing form used by ambulance services to submit claims for payment. |
front 177 Medicare Summary Notice | back 177 Statement sent to the patient to show how much the provider billed, how much Medicare reimbursed the provider, and what the patient must pay the provider. |
front 178 Coordination of Benefits | back 178 Method of integrating benefits payments from all health insurance sources to ensure that payments do not exceed 100% of the covered healthcare expenses. |
front 179 Explanation of Benefits | back 179 A statement sent by a third party payer to the patient to explain services provided, amounts billed, and payments made by the health plan. |
front 180 ASC | back 180 Ambulatory Surgical Center |
front 181 Bilateral procedures are reimbursed at | back 181 150% |
front 182 Calculate CMI (Case Mix Index) | back 182 Multiply each RW (Relative Weight) by number of patients. Add total of RWs. Add total number of patients. RW/# of Patients |
front 183 HIPPA requires the retention of health insurance claims and accounting records for a minimum of _____ years. | back 183 Six |
front 184 Fraud | back 184 Knowingly making false statements or representation of material facts to obtain a benefit or payment for which no entitlement would otherwise exist. A willful and intentional misrepresentation that could cause harm or loss to a person or the person's property. Intentionally making a claim for payment that one knows to be false. |
front 185 Abuse | back 185 Unknowing or unintentional submission of an inaccurate claim for payment. |
front 186 Payment Status Indicator | back 186 Assigned to every HCPCS/CPT code under the Medicare hospital outpatient prospective payment system to identify how the service or procedure described by the code would be paid (ex: fee schedule, APC, reasonable cost, unpaid, etc). These are letters A-H, K-P, Q1, Q2, Q3, R-V, X, and Y. Reimbursement book pg 177. C = Inpatient-only services N = Packaged into APC payment S = Significant procedures, multiple procedure reduction does not apply T = Surgical procedures, multiple production reduction applies V = Medical Visits X = Ancillary Services |
front 187 Medical Necessity | back 187 Term used to indicate that the service or procedure is reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of illness or injury consistent with generally accepted standards of care. Healthcare services and supplies that are proved or acknowledged to be effective in the diagnosis, treatment, cure, or relief of a health condition, illness, injury, disease, or its symptoms and to be consistent with the community's accepted standard of care. Only those services, procedures, and patient care are provided that are warranted by the patient's condition. |
front 188 Stark I Law | back 188 Prohibits a physician from referring Medicare patients to clinical laboratory services where a doctor or member of his family has a financial interest. |
front 189 Never Events | back 189 Errors in medical care that are of concern to both the public and health care professionals and providers, clearly identifiable and measurable (and thus feasible to include in a reporting system), and of a nature such that the risk of occurrence is significantly influenced by the policies and procedures of the health care organization. Errors in medical care that are clearly identifiable, preventable, and serious in their consequences for patients. |
front 190 Sentinel Events | back 190 Any unanticipated event in a healthcare setting resulting in death or serious physical or psychological injury to a patient or patients, not related to the natural course of the patient's illness. |
front 191 3-Day Payment Window or 72-Hour Rule | back 191 Requires that outpatient pre-admission services that are provided by a hospital up to 3 calendar days prior to a patient's inpatient admission be covered by the IPPS MS-DRG payment for
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front 192 Interrupted Stay | back 192 Discharge in which the patient was discharged from the inpatient rehabilitation facility and returns within 3 calendar days. Reimbursement continues as if the patient never left and is considered 1 discharge and 1 payment. |
front 193 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule MPFS | back 193 The maximum amount of reimbursement that Medicare will allow for a service. Consists of a list of payments for services defined by a service coding system, ex: HCPCS. Formula: (Work RVU * Work GPCI)+(PE RVU * PE GCPI)+(MP RVU * MP GCPI) = Sum SUM * CF = This It is most affected by the CF This replaced the Medicare physician payment system of "customary, prevailing, and reasonable" charges whereby physicians were reimbursed according to their historical record of the charge for the provision of each service. |
front 194 Global Payment | back 194 Method of payment in which the third-party payer makes one consolidated payment to cover the services of multiple providers who are treating a single episode of care. Ex: Home health. One payment covers speech therapy, physical therapy, occupational therapy, skilled nursing visits, home health aide visits, medical social services, and non-routine medical supplies. Total-Episode-of-Care is the most comprehensive version of this type of payment. |
front 195 Charge Capturing | back 195 This process involves the gathering of charge documents from all the departments within the facility that have provided services to patients to make certain that all charges are coded and entered into the billing system. |
front 196 Revenue Cycle | back 196 The regularly repeating set of events that produces revenue. The major components are
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front 197 Who can apply for and receive a waiver from CMS that allows them not to participate in the IPPS? | back 197
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front 198 Hold Harmless | back 198 Status in which one party does not hold the other party responsible. Financial protections to ensure that certain types of facilities (ex: children's hospitals) recoup all of their losses due to the differences in their APC payments and the pre-APC payments. |
front 199 Local Coverage Determinations LCD | back 199 Review policy that describes the circumstances of coverage (describes when and under what circumstances Medicare will cover a service) for various types of medical treatment. It advises physicians which services Medicare considers reasonable and necessary and may indicate the need for an advance beneficiary notice. Developed by CMS and Medicare Administrative Contractors. |
front 200 National Coverage Determinations NCD | back 200 Review policy that describes the circumstances of coverage (describes when and under what circumstances Medicare will cover a service) for various types of medical treatment. It advises physicians which services Medicare considers reasonable and necessary and may indicate the need for an advance beneficiary notice. Developed by CMS and Medicare Administrative Contractors. |
front 201 This information is printed on the UB-04 claim form to represent the cost center (eg- -lab, radiology, cardiology, respiratory, etc.) for the department in which the item is provided. It is used for Medicare billing.
| back 201 B. Revenue Code |
front 202 This information is used because it provides a uniform system of identifying procedures, services, or supplies. Multiple columns can be available for various financial classes.
| back 202 A. HCPCS Code |
front 203 This information provides a narrative name of the services provided. This information should be presented in a clear and concise manner. When possible, the narratives from the HCPCS/CPT book should be utilized.
| back 203 C. Item/Service Description |
front 204 This information is the numerical identification of the service or supply. Each item has a unique number with a prefix that indicates the department number (the number assigned to a specific ancillary department) and an item number (the number assigned by the accounting department or the business office) for a specific procedure or service represented on the chargemaster.
| back 204 A. Charge/Service Code |
front 205 This information is used to assign each item to a particular section of the general ledger in a particular facility's accounting section. Reports can be generated from this information to include statistics related to volume in terms of numbers, dollars, and payer types.
| back 205 A. General Ledger Key |
front 206 Discharged Not Final Billed DNFB | back 206 Includes all patients who have been discharged from the facility but for whom the billing process is not complete. |
front 207 What is the federal fiscal year? | back 207 October 1 - September 30 of following year. |
front 208 National Provider Identifier | back 208 A 10-digit, intelligence-free, numeric identifier designed to replace all previous provider legacy numbers. This number identifies the physician universally to all payers. This number is issued to all HIPAA-covered entities and is mandatory on the CMS-1500 and UB-04 claim forms. |
front 209 OIG's Workplan | back 209 A document published by the Office of Inspector General every year. It details the OIG's focus for Medicare fraud and abuse for that year. It gives healthcare providers an indication of general and specific areas that are targeted for review. It can be found on CMS' website. |
front 210 Advance Beneficiary Notice | back 210 A document signed by the patient indicating whether he wants to receive services that Medicare probably will not pay for. |
front 211 Lifetime Reserve Days | back 211 Original Medicare covers up to 90 days in a hospital per benefit period and offers an additional 60 days of coverage with a high coinsurance. These 60 reserve days can be used only once during your lifetime but do not have to be applied towards the same hospital stay. They are covered under Medicare Part A. They are usually reserved for use during the patient's final (terminal) hospital stay. They are not renewable, meaning once they are used, the patient is responsible for the total charges. |
front 212 Inpatient Rehab Facility | back 212 Diagnosis Grouping is CMG (Case Mix Groups) Assessment Instrument is PAI (Patient Assessment Instrument) Coding is HIPPS |
front 213 Hard Coding | back 213 HCPCS/CPT codes that appear in the hospital's chargemaster and will be included automatically on the patient's bill. The process of attaching a CPT/HCPCS code to a procedure located on the facility's chargemaster so that the code will automatically be included on the patient's bill. Used when coding does not require documentation analysis. Used for
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front 214 Cost Accounting | back 214 Accounting method that attributes a dollar figure to every input required to provide a service. |
front 215 Contractual Allowance | back 215 The difference between what the hospital bills and what they receive in payment from third-party payers, most commonly government programs. Also known as contractual adjustments. Ex: Providers billed $500 but Medicare contract only allows $400 to be reimbursed. |
front 216 CMS assigns one _____ to each APC and each _____ code. | back 216 Payment Status Indicator, HCPCS |
front 217 Corporate Integrity Agreement | back 217 When healthcare providers are found guilty under any of the civil false claims statuses, the OIG is responsible for negotiating these settlements, the provider is placed under this. A document that outlines the obligations an entity agrees to as part of a civil settlement. An entity agrees to the CIA obligations in exchange for the OIG’s agreement that it won’t seek to exclude entity from participation in Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs. |
front 218 Regarding hospital emergency department and hospital outpatient E/M CPT code assignment, which assignment is true? | back 218 Each facility is accountable for developing and implementing its own methodology. |
front 219 Medicare A | back 219 Covers
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front 220 Medicare B | back 220 Covers
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front 221 Medicare C Medicare Advantage | back 221 Plans offered by private companies approved by Medicare. Part A and Part B are covered in this. Drugs may or may not be included. |
front 222 Medicare D | back 222 Prescription drug coverage. |
front 223 Incident to Billing | back 223 Some services are performed by a nonphysician practitioner (such as a Physician Assistant). These services are in integral yet incidental component of a physician's treatment. A physician must have personally performed an initial visit and must remain actively involved in the continuing care. Medicare requires direct supervision for these services to be billed. This is called _____. |
front 224 Healthcare Effectiveness Data Information Set HEDIS | back 224 Sponsored by National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) A set of standard performance measures designed to provide healthcare purchasers & consumers with the information they need to compare the performance of managed healthcare plan. Measure of access (at least one visit to a provider within 3 years) Measures of quality (cholesterol screenings) Measures of member satisfaction (cost per month) |
front 225 Structure and Content Standards | back 225 Information standards that provide clear descriptors of data elements to be included in computer-based patient record systems. Establish and provide clear and uniform definitions of the data elements to be included in the EHR systems. Specify the type of data to be collected in each data field and the attributes and values of each data field, all of which are captured in data dictionaries. |
front 226 Clinical Data | back 226 Documents the patient's health condition, diagnosis, and procedures performed as well as the healthcare treatment provided. |
front 227 Administrative Data | back 227 Includes demographic and financial information as well as various consents and authorizations related to the provision of care and the handling of confidential patient information. |
front 228 Problem-Oriented Health Record | back 228 Problems are organized in numeric order. Key characteristic of this format is an itemized list of the patient's past and present social, psychological, and health problems. Each problem is indexed with a unique number. |
front 229 HL7 | back 229 A standards development organization accredited by the American National Standards Institute that addresses issues at the seventh, or application, level of healthcare systems interconnections. It develops messaging, data content, and document standards to support the exchange of clinical information. A family of standards that aids in the exchange of data among hospital systems and physician practices. |
front 230 American College of Surgeons | back 230 Has an approval process for cancer programs. One of the requirements of this process is the existence of a cancer registry as part of the program. |
front 231 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey | back 231 A database from the National Health Care Survey that uses the patient health record as a data source. Data are collected on a representative sample of hospital-based and freestanding ambulatory surgery centers. Data include patient demographic characteristics, source of payment, information on anesthesia given, the diagnoses, and the surgical and non-surgical procedures on patient visits of hospital-based and freestanding ambulatory surgery centers. |
front 232 Hospital Acquired Conditions List From CMS | back 232
If these occur, hospitals will not receive the higher reimbursement amount. It is a paying for value-based purchasing system. |
front 233 National Correct Coding Initiative Edits | back 233 Main purpose is to prohibit unbundling procedures. Also to improve the appropriate payment of Medicare Part B claims. Prevents improper payments when incorrect code combinations are on the claim/reported. Also apply to the APC system and are updated quarterly. |
front 234 Outpatient Code Editor OCE | back 234 Operates in the systems of Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) and provides a series of flags that can affect APC payment because it identifies coding errors in claims. |
front 235 Chief Privacy Officer | back 235 Entities are required to have one per the Privacy Rule. Role includes
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front 236 Privacy | back 236 The quality or state of being hidden from, or undisturbed by, the observation or activities of other persons or freedom from unauthorized intrusion. In healthcare related contexts, the right of a patient to control disclosure of personal information. |
front 237 Confidentiality | back 237 A legal and ethical concept that establishes the healthcare provider's responsibility for protecting health records and other personal and private information from unauthorized use or disclosure. |
front 238 Libel | back 238 Any publication in print, writing, pictures, or signs that injures the reputation of others. |
front 239 Slander | back 239 Speaking false and malicious words concerning another person that brings injury to his or her reputation. |
front 240 Defamation | back 240 The action of damaging the good reputation of someone Include slander or libel |
front 241 Statutory Law | back 241 Law that is constituted by rules and principles determined by legislative bodies, either Congress or a state legislature. Term used to define written laws, usually enacted by a legislative body. These vary from regulatory or administrative laws that are passed by executive agencies, and common law, or the law created by prior court decisions. Consists of ever changing rules and regulations created by Congress, state legislatures, local governments, or constitutional lawmakers. These are the inviolable rights, privileges, or immunities secured and protected for each citizen by the Constitution. The include written codes, bills, and acts (regulations). |
front 242 Administrative Law | back 242 A branch of law that covers regulations set by government agencies. Examples are licensing boards for physicians and nurses, Workman's Compensation Boards, and the Department of Health and Human Services. Regulations include
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front 243 Common Law | back 243 Also called case law. Is based on decisions made by judges when they apply previous court decisions to current cases. This means it is based on the judicial interpretation of previous laws, leading to a common understanding of how a law should be interpreted. Evolves on a case-by-case basis. |
front 244 Negligence | back 244 An unintentional action that occurs when a person either performs or fails to perform an action that a "reasonable person" would or would not have committed in a similar situation. The plaintiff must be able to show all of the following
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front 245 Duty | back 245 Must be shown to prove negligence. The responsibility established by the physician-patient relationship. The obligation one person has to another. |
front 246 Dereliction or Neglect of Duty | back 246 Must be shown to prove negligence. A physician's failure to act as any ordinary and prudent physician would act in a similar circumstance. Performance or treatment does not comply with the acceptable standard of care. |
front 247 Direct Cause | back 247 Must be shown to prove negligence. The continuous sequence of events, unbroken by any intervening cause, that produces an injury and without which the injury would not have occurred. |
front 248 Direct or Proximate Cause | back 248 Means that the injury was proximately or closely related to the physician's negligence. Means that there were no intervening forces between the defendant's actions and the plaintiff's injury - a cause-and-effect relationship. Ex: Dr ordered blood test. Lab tech performs venipuncture. PT complains of loss of feeling in arm. PT must prove there was no intervening injury between blood draw and pain in arm started. IE - no accident or injury |
front 249 Breach of Contract | back 249 The failure, without legal excuse, to perform any promise or to carry out any of the terms of an agreement. Failure to perform a contractual duty. EX: Physician refuses to perform service he promised or PT refuses to pay bill as promised by accepting care form physician. |
front 250 Contract Elements | back 250 Offer/Communication Price/Consideration Acceptance |
front 251 Spoliation | back 251 The intentional destruction, mutilation, alteration, or concealment of evidence. This affects e-discovery. |
front 252 Freedom of Information Act | back 252 A federal law through which individuals can seek access to information without authorization of the person to whom the information applies. This act applies only to federal agencies and not the private sector. The Veterans Administration and Defense Department hospital systems are subject to this act, but few other hospitals are. The only protection of health information held by federal agencies exists when disclosure would "constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy." |
front 253 Res Ipsa Loquitur | back 253 "The thing that speaks for itself." Applies to the law of negligence. Means the breach of duty is so obvious that it doesn't need further explanation - it can speak for itself and no witnesses are needed. EX: Leaving sponge in patient, amputating wrong limb, operating on wrong body part. |
front 254 Respondeat Superior | back 254 "Let the master answer" Means the employer is responsible for the actions of the employee. |
front 255 Stare Decisis | back 255 "Let the decision stand" Means to abide by, or adhere to, decided cases. |
front 256 Deposition | back 256 Oral testimony that is made before a public officer of the court to be used in a lawsuit. |
front 257 Interrogatory | back 257 Written questions submitted to a party from his or her adversary to ascertain answers that are prepared in writing and signed under oath and that have relevance to the issues in a lawsuit. |
front 258 Contributory Negligence | back 258 Conduct on the part of the plaintiff that is a contributing cause of injuries. If the plaintiff is found to be fully or in part at fault for the injury, the patient may be barred from recovering any monetary damages. |
front 259 Doctrine of Charitable Immunity | back 259 Premise that charitable institutions could be held blameless for their negligent acts. |
front 260 Darling v. Charleston Community Memorial Hospital | back 260 Established the doctrine of corporate negligence. |
front 261 Doctrine of Corporate Negligence | back 261 The legal doctrine that holds health-care facilities, such as hospitals, nursing homes and medical clinics, responsible for the well-being of patients. If a health-care facility fails to maintain a clean and safe environment, hire competent and properly trained employees, oversee care and implement safety policies, it can be held liable for any harm to patients. |
front 262 Privacy Act of 1974 | back 262 Provides private citizens some control over information that the federal government collects about them by limiting the use of information for unnecessary purposes. An agency may maintain only the information that is relevant to its authorized purpose. Citizens have the right to gain access to their records and to copy any of the records. Only applies to federal agencies and government contractors. Allows patients of a Department of Defense health care facility to request amendments to their record. |
front 263 Misfeasance | back 263 The improper performance of an otherwise proper or lawful act. Ex: Nurse does venipuncture incorrectly causing nerve damage. |
front 264 Malpractice | back 264 Professional misconduct or demonstration of an unreasonable lack of a skill with the result of injury, loss, or damage to the patient. Ex: Leaving sponge in patient. |
front 265 Nonfeasance | back 265 The failure to perform an action when it is necessary. Ex: Failure to give CPR to a patient who collapses in the waiting room. |
front 266 Malfeasance | back 266 Performing an illegal act. Ex: Nurse prescribing medication. |
front 267 Informed Consent | back 267 Consent granted by a person after the patient has received knowledge and understanding of potential risks and benefits. Ideal form of consent. |
front 268 Implied Consent | back 268 An agreement that is made through inference by signs, inaction, or silence. Ex: Sticking arm out for shot. |
front 269 Courts can release adoption records based on _____. | back 269 A court order for good cause. |
front 270 Advance Directives | back 270 The various methods by which a patient has the right to self-determination prior to a medical necessity - includes living wills, healthcare proxies, and durable power of attorney. |
front 271 Living Will | back 271 A legal document in which a person states that life-sustaining treatments and nutritional support should not be used to prolong life. A type of advance directive. |
front 272 Patient Self-Determination Act | back 272 Encourages everyone to decide about the types and extent of medical care they want to accept or refuse if they become unable to make those decisions due to illness. This requires all health care agencies to recognize the living will and durable power of attorney for health care and applies to hospitals, long-term care facilities, and home health agencies that get Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement. Health care agencies must ask whether there is an advance directive and document it the medical record. They also must give patients information about their rights under state law. |
front 273 Durable Power of Attorney | back 273 A legal agreement that allows an agent or representative of the patient to act on behalf of the patient. A type of advance directive. |
front 274 Client Server | back 274 Predominant form of computer architecture used in healthcare organizations today. A computer architecture in which multiple computers that store and process application software and data are connected to other computers that enter data and retrieve information. Ex: A server contains Microsoft Word. Word is accessed from a cubicle and a document is created. The document is saved on the server. |
front 275 Foreign Key | back 275 A key attribute used to link one entity/table to another. A column of one table that corresponds to a _____ key of another table. Together they allow the two tables to join together. Used to associate relationships between entities (tables) in a relational database. |
front 276 Primary Key | back 276 An explanatory notation that uniquely identifies each row in a database. Ensure that each row is unique and must not change in value. Typically a number. It is good programming practice to create one that is independent of the data in the table. |
front 277 Interfaces | back 277 The zone between different computer systems across which users want to pass information. Ex: A computer program written to exchange information between systems of the graphic display of an application program designed to make the program easier. Microsoft Windows. |
front 278 Natural Language Processing NLP | back 278 A field of computer science and linguistics concerned with the interactions between computers and human languages that converts information from computer databases into readable human language. Digital text form online documents stored in the organization's information system is read directly by the software, which then suggests codes to match the documentation. Is used in computer-assisted coding (CAC). |
front 279 Integration Test | back 279 Determines how well new systems being implemented work with existing systems. |
front 280 Digital Certificate | back 280 An electronic document that establishes a person's identity online. A process of identity proofing that generates electronic authentication credentials. Must be issued by a federally approved credential service provider or certification authority. Used to implement public key encryption on a large scale. An electronic document that uses a digital signature to bind together a public key with an identity such as the name of a person or organization, their address, and so forth. Can be used to verify that a public key belongs to an individual. Uses the letter S at the end of HTTP. |
front 281 Digital Imaging and Communication in Medicine DICOM | back 281 A standard that promotes a digital image communications format and picture archive and communications systems for use with digital images. |
front 282 Cloud Computing | back 282 Information systems that use the Internet to access data. Refers to the delivery of computing resources over a network sold as a metered service - like buying electricity. To keep costs low, the vendor provides the same service to every client, so customization is not possible. |
front 283 Virtual Private Network VPN | back 283 An encrypted tunnel through the Internet that enables secure transmission of data or to connect remote sites or users. Designed to reduce the cost of used leased lines through a WAN while maintaining security. |
front 284 RFP | back 284 Request for Proposal Components include
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front 285 Organizational Profile | back 285 Component of the RFP Describes the healthcare organization making request
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front 286 Vendor Information | back 286 Component of the RFP Asks the vendor for a description of its demographics. Includes
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front 287 Functional Specifications | back 287 Component of the RFP Organization requests a description of functional capability, such as processes and workflows and the product supports, and compares these against its redesigned workflows and processes. The organization may develop a script describing a scenario, or use case, based on its redesigned workflows and processes and ask vendor how product would perform the inherent functions. |
front 288 Operational Requirements | back 288 Component of the RFP Should elicit information on the EHR product's
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front 289 Technical Requirements | back 289 Component of the RFP Vendor should propose the appropriate technical architecture to meet the organization's EHR functional specifications and operational requirements, delineating the specific hardware, networking, and software requirements. |
front 290 Application Support | back 290 Component of the RFP Vendor proposes an implementation schedule and describes data conversion, acceptance testing, training, and documentation as well as the ongoing support, maintenance, and upgrades it will supply. |
front 291 Licensing and Contractual Details | back 291 Component of the RFP Vendor is asked to supply its specific one-time bid and recurring costs based on the organization's requirements. Should also include a request for the vendor's standard contract, financing arrangements, proposed relationships with hardware vendors, and warranty information. |
front 292 Evaluation Criteria | back 292 Component of the RFP Explains what the organization thinks is the most important so the vendor knows upfront. |
front 293 BC-MAR | back 293 Bar Code Medication Administration Record |
front 294 One way that an EHR is distinguished from a clinical data repository is that the EHR ____ | back 294 Has clinical decision support capabilities. |
front 295 Information Brokering | back 295 Buying and selling information. |
front 296 Decision Support System DSS | back 296 Provides information to help users make accurate decisions. |
front 297 Knowledge Management System KMS | back 297 A type of system that supports the creation, organization, and dissemination of business or clinical knowledge and expertise to providers, employees, and managers throughout a healthcare enterprise. |
front 298 Differentiate between the physical and logical data models. | back 298 The logical data model shows what the system should do. The physical model shows how the logical data model will be created. |
front 299 Back-End Speech Recognition | back 299 Specific use of speech recognition technology (SRT) in an environment where the recognition process occurs after the completion of dictation by sending voice files through a server. |
front 300 Front-End Speech Recognition | back 300 The specific use of a speech recognition technology in an environment where the recognition process occurs in real time (or near real time) as dictation takes place. |
front 301 Data Mart | back 301 A well-organized, user-centered, searchable database system that usually draws information from a data warehouse to meet the specific needs of the user. A subset of the data warehouse designed for a single purpose or specialized use. It performs the same type of analyses as a data warehouse; however, the target area is narrower. |
front 302 Relational Database | back 302 A type of database that stores data in predefined tables made up of rows and columns. Data that can be stored are
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front 303 Object Oriented Database | back 303 A type of database that uses commands that act as small, self-contained instructional units (objects) that may be combined in various ways. Data that can be stored are
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front 304 Hierarchical Database | back 304 A type of database that allows duplicate data. |
front 305 Laboratory Information System LIS | back 305 An information system that collects, stores, and manages laboratory tests and their respective results. It can speed up access to test results through improved efficiency from various locations, including anywhere in the hospital, the physician's office, or even the clinician's home. |
front 306 Radiology Information System RIS | back 306 A system that collects, stores, and provides information on radiological tests such as ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography. |
front 307 Pharmacy Information System | back 307 System that assists care providers in ordering, allocating, and administering medication. It focuses on patient safety issues, especially medication errors and allergies and providing optimal patient care. Must be in place to ensure that CPOE system supports patient safety. |
front 308 Physical Safeguards | back 308 Include the protection of computer systems from natural and environmental hazards and intrusion. Consist of
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front 309 Risk Management | back 309 Encompasses the identification, management, and control of untoward events. Can aid prevention, intrusion detection, and mitigation of security breaches including identity theft. Development prompted by the medical malpractice crisis of the 1970s. |
front 310 Risk Assessment | back 310 Identifying security threats, risks, and vulnerabilities, determining how likely it is that any given threat may occur, and estimating the impact of an untoward event. Usually performed by a multidisciplinary team that has specific knowledge about data security and the organization. |
front 311 Access Control | back 311 A computer software program designed to prevent unauthorized use of an information resource. The process of designing, implementing, and monitoring a system for guaranteeing that only individuals with a legitimate need are allowed to view or amend specific data sets. Being able to identify which employees should have access only to data they need to do their jobs. |
front 312 Authentication | back 312 The process of identifying the source of health record entries by attaching a handwritten signature, the author's initials, or an electronic signature. Proof of authorship that ensures, as much as possible, that log-ins and messages from a user originate from an authorized source. |
front 313 Authorization | back 313 The granting of permission to disclose confidential information. As defined in terms of the HIPAA Privacy Rule, an individual's formal written permission to use or disclose his or her personally identifiable health information for purposes other than treatment, payment, or healthcare operations. |
front 314 Administrative Safeguards | back 314 Include policies and procedures that address the management of computer resources. Ex: Policy may state that user must log off when not using computer. They use
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front 315 Cracker | back 315 An individual with extensive computer knowledge whose purpose is to breach or bypass internet security or gain access to software without paying royalties. The general view is that they break things and their motivations can range from profit, a cause they believe in, general maliciousness or just because they like the challenge. They may steal credit card numbers, leave viruses, destroy files or collect personal information to sell. |
front 316 Fetal Death | back 316 A stillborn baby. Death is prior to the fetus's complete expulsion or extraction from the mother regardless of the length of the pregnancy. They are neither admitted or discharged from the hospital. Fetal death occurs when the fetus fails to breathe or show any sign of life - heartbeat, pulsation of the umbilical cord, or movement of the voluntary muscles. Only intermediate and late fetal deaths are included in fetal death rate calculations. |
front 317 Average Daily Census | back 317 Total Inpatient Service Days for a Period (not NB) Total number of days |
front 318 Average LOS | back 318 Total Length of Stay (discharge days) Total Number of Discharges |
front 319 Percentage of Occupancy | back 319 Total Number of Inpatient Service Days X 100 Total Inpatient Bed Count Days x Number of Days |
front 320 Inpatient Bed Count | back 320 Number of available hospital beds, both occupied and vacant, on any given day |
front 321 Total Inpatient | back 321 Sum of all inpatient service days for each of the days in the period. |
front 322 Length of Stay LOS | back 322 Number of calendar days from admission to discharge. |
front 323 Total Length of Stay | back 323 Sum of the days' stay of any group of inpatients discharged during a specific period. |
front 324 Inpatient Bed Count Day | back 324 Counts the presence ot one inpatient bed (occupied or vacant) |
front 325 Total Inpatient Bed Count Day | back 325 Sum of all bed count days for each of the days in a period. |
front 326 Bed Turnover Rate Direct Formula | back 326 Total Number of Discharges Average Bed Count for the Period or Discharges Beds |
front 327 Bed Turnover Rate Indirect Formula | back 327 Use this formula in cases where the bed count changes during the period. Percentage of Occupancy x Days in the Period X 100 Average Length of Stay |
front 328 Anesthesia Death Rate | back 328 Total Number of Deaths Caused by an Anesthetic Agent X 100 Total Number of Anesthetics Administered |
front 329 Fetal Death Rate | back 329 Stillbirth Rate Total Number of Intermediate and Late Fetal Deaths X 100 Total Number of Births + Intermediate and Late Fetal Deaths |
front 330 Gross Hospital Death Rate | back 330 Proportion of all discharges that ended in death. Total Number of Inpatient Deaths (including newborns) X 100 Total Number of Discharges (including deaths and newborns) |
front 331 Net Hospital Death Rate | back 331 Number of Inpatient Deaths (including NB) - Deaths <48 Hours of Admission Total Discharges (including deaths and NB - Deaths <48 Hours) That number X 100 |
front 332 Maternal Death Rate | back 332 Total Number of Maternal Deaths X 100 Total Number of OB Discharges |
front 333 Neonatal Death Rate | back 333 Infant Mortality Rate Total Number of NB Deaths X 100 Total Number of Newborn Discharges |
front 334 Postoperative Death Rate | back 334 Number of Deaths Within 10 Days of Surgery X 100 Total Number of Patients Operated on |
front 335 Newborn Autopsy Rate | back 335 Number of Autopsies on NB Deaths X 100 Total Number of NB Deaths |
front 336 Fetal Autopsy Rate | back 336 Number of Autopsies on Intermediate and Late Fetal Deaths X 100 Total Number of Intermediate and Late Fetal Deaths |
front 337 Gross Autopsy Rate | back 337 Total Inpatient Autopsies X 100 Total Inpatient Deaths |
front 338 Net Autopsy Rate | back 338 Total Inpatient Autopsies X 100 Total Inpatient Deaths - Unautopsied Coroner's Cases |
front 339 Hospital Autopsy Rate (Adjusted) | back 339 Total Hospital Autopsies X 100 Number of Deaths of Hospital Patients Whose Bodies are Available for Hospital Autopsy |
front 340 Newborn | back 340 Infants born alive in the hospital |
front 341 Fetal Death Classifications | back 341 Early Fetal Death - <20 weeks gestation 500g or less Intermediate Fetal Death - 20 weeks to <28 weeks gestation 501-1000g Late Fetal Death - 28 weeks gestation over 1000g |
front 342 Verbal Order Authentication | back 342 Based on federal and state law. Must be done within 48 hours if a state time frame doesn't exist. |
front 343 Clinical Privileges | back 343 Granted for no more than 2 years at a time. |
front 344 Kaizen | back 344 A core principle of quality management generally, and specifically within the methods of Total Quality Management and 'Lean Manufacturing'. |
front 345 Crosby | back 345 Focused on Zero Defects |
front 346 Peters | back 346 Identified leadership as being central to the quality improvement process, discarding the word “Management” for “Leadership”. |
front 347 Deming | back 347 Revitalized the Japanese economy. Quality must be built into the product. Developed a 14 point plan to help executives to lead their organizations. Believed merit raises, formal evaluations, and quotas established through benchmarking hinder worker productivity and growth. |
front 348 Joiner | back 348 Maintained that quality begins at the top and funnels down. Developed the Joiner triangle that consists of
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front 349 Juran | back 349 Consulted with the Japanese. Claimed that management could control over 80% of quality defects by using the three central principles of quality: planning, control, and improvement. Believed that training and hand-on management are basic requirements for meeting the needs of customers. |
front 350 Force Field Analysis | back 350 A performance improvement tool used to identify specific drivers of, and barriers to, an organizational change so that positive factors can be reinforced and negative factors reduced. |
front 351 Structure Indicators | back 351 Measure the attributes of the setting, such as number and qualifications of the staff, adequacy of equipment and facilities, and adequacy of organizational policies and procedures. |
front 352 Process Indicators | back 352 Measure the actions by which services are provided, the things people or devices do, from conducting appropriate tests, to making a diagnosis, to actually carrying out a treatment. |
front 353 Outcome Indicators | back 353 Measure the actual results of care for patients and populations, including patient and family satisfaction. |
front 354 Control Chart | back 354 This has the sideways bell curve with lines indicating two or three standard deviations from the mean. A type of run chart that includes both upper and lower control limits and indicates whether a process is stable or unstable. Best tool for differentiating between common cause variation and special cause variation. |
front 355 Run Chart | back 355 Displays data points over a period of time.to provide information about performance and identifies emerging trends or patterns. Same as a line graph. |
front 356 Special Cause Variation | back 356 An unusual source of variation that occurs outside a process but affects it. Ex: Upsetting phone call right before BP reading will elevate BP. BP meds will lower BP causing a lower reading. |
front 357 Common Cause Variation | back 357 The source of variation in a process that is inherent within the process. Ex: BP readings - cuff may be placed slightly differently each time slightly skewing the reading but not by much. |
front 358 Administrator, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research AAHCPR | back 358 Established by Congress in 1989 "for the purpose of enhancing the quality, appropriateness, and effectiveness of health care services and access to care." |
front 359 Institute of Medicine IOM | back 359 Published a landmark report in 1991, To Err Is Human, outlining the need for computer-based patient record systems. Report led the Joint Commission to place emphasis on improving patient safety and sentinel event occurrences through its safety program known as National Patient Safety Goals (NPSG). Nonprofit organization that is part of the National Academies that provides advice to lawmakers and the public. Defined what an EHR should be. |
front 360 National Committee for Quality Assurance NCQA | back 360 An accreditation organization that began accrediting managed care organizations in 1991. Standards focus on patient safety, confidentiality, consumer protection, access to services, service quality, and continuous improvement efforts. Recently expanded its programs to include other types of health plans and specialty certifications for non-comprehensive programs such as ones focusing on multicultural healthcare or disease management. |
front 361 Physician Quality Reporting System PQRS | back 361 An incentive payment system for eligible professionals who satisfactorily report data on quality measures for covered professional services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries. |
front 362 Six Sigma | back 362 Uses statistics for measuring variation in a process with the intent of producing error free results. This measure indicates no more than 3.4 errors per one million encounters. Defines improvement opportunities using a critical quality tree. |
front 363 National Patient Safety Goals NPSG | back 363 Goals issued by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations to improve patient safety in healthcare organizations nationwide. They outline for healthcare organizations the areas of organizational practice that most commonly lead to patient injury or other negative outcomes that can be prevented when staff utilize standardized procedures. |
front 364 Intracycle Monitoring | back 364 The Joint Commission's emphasis on improving quality of patient care for a participating facility is exemplary through the required self-assessment of this process tool. |
front 365 Span of Control | back 365 Refers to the number of subordinates or departments a supervisor has |
front 366 Formal Theory of Authority | back 366 Authority is based upon the rank or position of the person. |
front 367 Specialization of Labor | back 367 The division of cooperating individuals who perform specific tasks and roles into roles where each does his own task, or part of the whole, and the end product is the result. |
front 368 Unity of Command | back 368 Refers to the principle that a subordinate should have one and only one superior to whom he or she is directly responsible. |
front 369 Flex Time | back 369 Allows their employees to control the work schedule within parameters established by management. |
front 370 Bona Fide Occupational Qualification | back 370 An exception to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act that allows an employer to know employees' ages if they can demonstrate that age makes a difference to the job. Ex: Waitress must be 18 to serve alcohol. |
front 371 Trigger Events | back 371
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front 372 Business Continuity Processes | back 372 A program that incorporates policies and procedures for continuing business operations during a computer system shutdown. Sometimes called contingency and disaster planning. |
front 373 Data Use Agreement | back 373 A legal binding agreement between the OPDIV and an external entity (e.g., contractor, private industry, academic institution, other Federal government agency, or state agency), when an external entity requests the use of personally identifiable data that is covered by a legal authority, such as the Privacy Act of 1974. The agreement delineates the confidentiality requirements of the relevant legal authority, security safeguards, and the OPDIV’s data use policies and procedures. It serves as both a means of informing data users of these requirements and a means of obtaining their agreement to abide by these requirements. It serves as a control mechanism for tracking the location(s) of the OPDIV’s data and the reason for the release of the data and requires that a System of Records (SOR) be in effect, which allows for the disclosure of the data being used. |
front 374 Federal Sentencing Guidelines | back 374 Outline 7 steps as the hallmark of an effective program to prevent and detect violations of the law. These steps have become the blueprint for an effective compliance program for healthcare organizations. These were established by the US Sentencing Commission to establish "uniform punishment that is applied to similarly situated defendants upon conviction". |
front 375 Office of Inspector General OIG | back 375 Issues compliance program guidance for various types of healthcare organizations.Their website posts the documents that most healthcare organizations need to develop fraud and abuse compliance plans. Investigates and audits healthcare fraud. |
front 376 Middle Management | back 376 Develops, implements, and revises the organization's policies. |
front 377 Staffing Tools | back 377 Used to plan and manage staff resources. Examples:
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front 378 Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 | back 378 Made compliance programs necessary. Was enacted in '06 and is particularly significant from a compliance perspective because it has transformed the nature of compliance programs from voluntary to mandatory. Mandated a quality adjustment in the MS-DRG payments for certain hospital-acquired conditions. Inpatient hospitals are required to submit POA indicators on diagnoses for all inpatients. |
front 379 Business Associate Agreements | back 379 A written and signed contract that allows covered entities to lawfully disclose protected health information to business associates such as consultants, billing companies, accounting firms, or others that may perform services for the provider, provided that the business associate agrees to abide by the provider's requirements to protect the information's security and confidentiality. |
front 380 Facilities that have to meet the standards in the Conditions of Participation | back 380
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front 381 Audit Trail | back 381 A record of system and application activity by users that tracks when an employee has accessed the system and how long the employee has been logged into a system. It logs:
Can be used to to help reconstruct when an adverse event or failure occurred. |
front 382 Who is primarily responsible for implementing the policies and strategic direction of the hospital or healthcare organization and for building and effective executive management team?
| back 382 B. Chief Executive Officer |
front 383 Record Copying Fees | back 383 Privacy Rule requires that the copy fee for the individual be reasonable and cost based. It can only include the costs of labor for copying, postage if mailed, cost of paper if hard copies are made, or cost of media if electronic copies are made. |
front 384 Recovery Audit Contractor RAC | back 384 Program was completely implemented in the US by January, 2010. Used to detect and correct improper payments in the Medicare fee-for-service program. |
front 385 Cost Control | back 385 The one aspect of managed care that has had the greatest impact on healthcare organizations. |
front 386 Federal Anti-Kickback Statute | back 386 A criminal statute that prohibits the exchange (or offer to exchange), of anything of value, in an effort to induce (or reward) the referral of federal health care program business. Exceptions to this are called Safe Harbors |
front 387 Joint Commission | back 387 Accreditation organization that surveys facilities for compliance and the Medicare Conditions of Participation for Hospitals. They grant deemed status. |
front 388 Chief Information Officer CIO | back 388 A senior-level executive who is responsible for
These functions are performed by the IS department, telecommunications, management engineering, and HIM departments. This person typically reports directly to the organization's CEO |
front 389 Chief Privacy Officer CPO | back 389 A position that
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front 390 Chief Information Security Officer CISO | back 390 A recently created position that is responsible for
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front 391 Chief Medical Informatics Officer CMIO | back 391 A relatively new position within the information services organizational structure, typically held by a member of the medical staff and responsible for
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front 392 Server Redundancy | back 392 Situation where two servers are duplicating efforts. Helps ensure continuous availability of electronic data in case one server goes down. |
front 393 Server Failover | back 393 At least two, if not more, servers are performing the same processing on data simultaneously. |
front 394 Implementation Plan | back 394 A much more detailed plan that identifies often what is hundreds or more steps to implement each application. The vendor usually supplies a generic plan for how it likes to implement the EHR. It is important to adjust the vendor's plan outlining implementation details with the organization's plan, which will include some of the same and additional tasks. |
front 395 Migration Path | back 395 A series of steps required to move from one situation to another. |
front 396 Role Based | back 396 A security mechanism that grants users of a system based on their role in the organization. Ex: Nurses have different access than coders. Type most often used. |
front 397 User Based | back 397 A security mechanism that grants users of a system based on their identity. |
front 398 Interoperability | back 398 The ability of one computer system to exchange data with another computer system. |
front 399 X12N | back 399 Electronic transaction standards of ASC that allow providers and plans or payers to seamlessly transfer data back and forth. |
front 400 Identity Matching Alogorithm | back 400 Rules established in an information system that predicts the probability that two or more patients in the database are the same patient. A key piece of data needed to link a patient who is seen in a variety of care settings. |
front 401 Mainframe | back 401 A computer architecture built with a single central processing unit to which dumb terminals and/or personal computers are connected. They can perform millions of instructions per second, are designed to connect input and output devices over long distances, and can handle hundreds or thousands of users at the same time. |
front 402 Dual Core | back 402 A vendor strategy in which one vendor primarily supplies the financial and administrative applications and another vendor supplies the clinical applications. |
front 403 Best of Breed | back 403 A vendor strategy used when purchasing an EHR that refers to system applications that are considered the best in their class. |
front 404 Best of Fit | back 404 A vendor strategy used when purchasing an EHR in which all the systems required by the healthcare facility are available from one vendor. |
front 405 What basic components make up every electronic network communications system? | back 405
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front 406 Planning and Analysis Phase | back 406 A system development life cycle phase. The first step in adopting new IS technology. A process for setting IS priorities within an organization and identifying and prioritizing IS needs based on the organization's strategic goals with the intent of ensuring that all IS technology initiatives are integrated and aligned with the organization's overall strategic plan. |
front 407 Design Phase | back 407 A system development life cycle phase. Specifies the functions of the system and provides the design or blueprint of the proposed system. Describe's the system's hows. |
front 408 Implementation Phase | back 408 A system development life cycle phase. Includes the development of the computer programs, testing of the system, and development of system documentation, user training, and system conversion. |
front 409 Maintenance and Evaluation Phase | back 409 A system development life cycle phase. Ensures both the short and long term success of the information system. |
front 410 Personal Health Record PHR | back 410 Considered a consumer-centric informatics application. |
front 411 Kiosk | back 411 A computer station that promotes the healthcare organization's services. A place where a patient can schedule appointments, pay bills, obtain education material, signed informed consents, request ROIs, enter health history data using templates, or engage in an e-visit. |
front 412 Expert System | back 412 A knowledge system built from a set of rules applied to specific problems. It can take the place of a human expert when it comes to problem solving. The system simulates the reasoning process of human experts in certain well-defined areas. |
front 413 Issues Management | back 413 The process of resolving unexpected occurrences. Ex: Late delivery of needed supplies or an uncovered systems problem. |
front 414 Audit Log | back 414 A chronological set of computer records that provides evidence of information system activity (log-ins and log-outs, file accesses) that is used to determine security violations. An example of metadata. |
front 415 Metadata | back 415 Descriptive data that characterize other data to create a clearer understanding of their meaning and to achieve greater reliability and quality of information. Data about data. |
front 416 Systems Testing | back 416 The testing of use cases created in the design phase. Testing should also be done using real patient data, not sample data the vendor has provided or the organization has created for training purposes. |
front 417 Picture Archiving and Communication System PACS | back 417 An integrated computer system that obtains, stores, retrieves, and displays digital images (x-rays). |
front 418 WORM Technology Write Once, Read Many | back 418 A data storage technology that allows information to be written to a disc a single time and prevents the drive from erasing the data. The discs are intentionally not rewritable, because they are especially intended to store data that the user does not want to erase accidentally. |