Okla. Admin. Code § 310:667-19-8 - Content
(a) The medical record shall contain
sufficient information to justify the diagnosis and warrant the treatment
provided. The medical record shall contain the following information:
(1) Identification data. Identification data
shall include at least the patient's name, address, age and date of birth, sex,
and marital status.
(2) Date of
admission.
(3) Date of
discharge.
(4) Chief complaint. The
chief complaint shall consist of a concise statement describing the reason the
patient is seeking medical attention.
(5) History of present illness. The history
of the present illness shall include a detailed description of the patient's
symptoms including:
(A) Location of
pain;
(B) Quality of pain and
symptoms;
(C) Severity;
(D) Timing;
(E) Duration;
(F) Modifying factors, i.e., things that
worsen or alleviate symptoms; and
(G) Associated signs and symptoms.
(6) Past history. The past history
shall include all previous illnesses and previous surgical
procedures.
(7) Medication history.
The medication history shall list all current medications and all know drug
reactions/allergies.
(8) Social
history. The social history shall include a description of the patient's social
setting and use of tobacco and/or alcohol, illicit drugs, and work
history.
(9) Family history. The
family history shall include a description of the state of health of living
first-degree relatives, and causes of death of first-degree
relatives.
(10) Review of systems.
Elements of the review of systems shall include:
(A) General overall condition (fever, weight
loss, stamina, etc.);
(B) Head,
eyes, ears, nose, throat;
(C)
Cardiovascular;
(D)
Respiratory;
(E) Breasts;
(F) Gastrointestinal;
(G) Genitourinary;
(H) Musculoskeletal;
(I) Skin and lymphatics;
(J) Neurological;
(K) Psychiatric;
(L) Hematologic;
(M) Allergic; and
(N) Immunologic.
(11) Physical examination. The physical
examination shall include a record of the patient's vital signs at the time of
the examination including height, weight, blood pressure, temperature, pulse
rate, and respiratory rate. Negative findings for a system may be indicated in
the record of the physical examination by the lack of an entry for that system.
If the hospital allows negative findings for a system on physical examination
to be documented by omission of an entry for that system, medical records
policies and procedures shall specify whether the omission of an entry
signifies the system was examined and no significant findings were noted or
that no examination of that system was performed. Specific abnormal or
pertinent negative findings of the examination of the affected or symptomatic
body area(s) must be documented in regards to the following areas:
(A) Head, eyes, ears, nose, and
throat;
(B) Neck;
(C) Chest, including lungs, breasts, and
axilla;
(D) Cardiovascular,
including peripheral pulses, and examination of abdominal aorta;
(E) Abdomen;
(F) Genitourinary;
(G) Hematologic and Immunologic;
(H) Musculoskeletal;
(I) Neurological;
(J) Psychiatric; and
(K) Skin and lymphatics.
(12) Provisional diagnosis which shall be an
impression (diagnosis) reflecting the examining physician's or licensed
independent practitioner's evaluation of the patient's condition and shall be
based mainly upon physical findings and history.
(13) Special examinations, if any, such as
clinical laboratory reports, diagnostic imaging studies, consultation reports,
etc. Consultation reports shall be a written opinion and shall be signed by the
consultant, including his or her findings from the history and physical
examination of the patient.
(14)
Treatment and medication orders.
(15) Diagnostic and medical procedure
reports.
(16) Surgical records
including anesthesia record, preoperative diagnosis, operative procedure and
findings, postoperative diagnosis, and tissue diagnosis on all specimens
examined. Tissue reports shall include a report of microscopic findings if
hospital regulations require that microscopic examination be done. If only
gross examination is warranted, a statement that the tissue has been received
and a gross description shall be made by the laboratory and filed in the
medical record.
(17) Progress and
nursing notes shall give a chronological picture of the patient's progress and
shall be sufficient to delineate the course and results of treatment. The
condition of the patient shall determine the frequency with which they are
made.
(18) Record of temperature,
pulse, respiration, and blood pressure.
(19) Definitive final diagnosis expressed in
terminology of a recognized system of disease nomenclature.
(20) Discharge Summary that shall be a
recapitulation of the significant findings and events of the patient's
hospitalization and condition upon discharge, including prescribed medications
at time of discharge.
(21) Autopsy
findings in a complete protocol shall be filed in the record when an autopsy is
performed.
(b) Facsimile
copies shall be acceptable as any portion of the medical record. If the
facsimile is transmitted on thermal paper , that paper shall be photocopied to
preserve its integrity in the record. Facsimile copies shall be considered the
same as original copies.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.