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Report Writing: The Unwritten Rules
Author: Richard H. Adler
Much has been written about the importance of well documented records
in meeting the needs of the patient, provider, insurer, and patient's
attorney in the area of personal injury and insurance law. Good
documentation provides clear information of the care given to a
patient; records the progress of treatment; enables the doctor to
substantiate opinions on diagnosis, causation, and prognosis; is a
source of the patient's history and prior treatment; and justifies the
reasonableness and necessity of care for the insurer and the patient's
attorney.
The same rationale for keeping good patient records also applies to
preparing narrative reports. However, not much has been published for
health care providers outlining some of the "unwritten rules" of report
writing. Sometimes providers learn of these unwritten rules and
expectations after the fact, which can create problems for the doctor,
patient, insurer, and/or patient's attorney. The following are factors
to think about when responding to requests for personal injury
narrative reports.
A. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS - A well written report outlining the patient's
condition, diagnosis, impressions, and prognosis will be well received
and builds your reputation as an expert in your field.
- Well written reports keep you out of court.
- Well written reports save time because they do not generate requests for clarification or additional information.
- Effective reports aid in resolving cases.
- Poor grammar, misspelled words, or incomplete sentences
reflect poorly on the professionalism of the doctor. It indicates to
the reader that you are either too busy to be careful or are not well
informed.
B. USE OF COMPUTERS- Computers are almost a necessity for a business in the
1990's. Computers can help an office create written procedures,
streamline business operations, and generate insightful management
reports if programmed properly. However, use of computer software to
generate narrative reports runs the substantial risk of creating
"cloned" or "boiler-plate" documents. Report writing needs to be
controlled by the health care provider; time and thought are necessary
ingredients. You cannot delegate report writing to a computer program
without it coming back to damage your reputation in the long run.
- Computer output is only as good as what you put into it. Computers cannot diagnose and they cannot reason.
- Computer boiler-plate is easy to spot. Just as our law firm
keeps track of doctors and the reports they write, insurance companies
also keep track of reports that treating doctors write. If you say
essentially the same thing over and over again in all cases, then your
reputation and credibility may be called into question.
C. STYLE- Format. The format of a report should be laid out
with subheadings so that a reader interested in finding specific
information does not have to read through the entire report.
- Date. Most reports are not dictated, transcribed, and
signed by the doctor the same day. The report should indicate when it
was prepared and when it was signed. Once in a while, the gap between
when a report is written and signed can cause problems. Consider the
following example: a report was dictated on September 1, 1992, and
signed on September 10, 1992. The report indicates that there were no
pain problems remaining after the patient had been discharged. However,
on September 8, 1992, there was a new injury and the patient was seen
in the doctor's office on September 9, 1992. The patient then makes a
second claim under the second accident. The insurance company on the
second accident claims the patient was not hurt from that accident
because he was seen by a doctor and the doctor's report one day later
indicates there were no pain problems remaining.
- Addressee. Use the full name and title of the
individual to whom you are addressing the report. For example, if
sending it to me, address it to Richard H. Adler, Attorney at Law, 401
Second Avenue South, Suite 600, Seattle, Washington 98104. If you are
addressing it to an insurance adjuster, send it to Mr. No Cando, Claims
Representative, Premiums Are Us Insurance Company, 1300 Policy Street,
Our Town, Washington 98000.
- Headers. At the top left of each page is the header.
All pages should have a page number, patient name, and date of the
report. This way, everyone handling, reading, or receiving this report
knows how many pages are in the report and if any are missing.
- Salutation. Salutations must reflect the professional
relationship, not a personal relationship. Never address a letter to
the adjuster or attorney as "Dear Richard," rather it is best to say
"Dear Mr. Adler."
D. TIMING- Do not prepare a report until it is requested in writing.
- Don't write a report unless you have a valid medical authorization.
- Quick turnaround time in preparing a narrative report shows
that you are on top of your practice and the particular case in
question.
- Approximately two weeks is a reasonable turnaround from the time you receive a request for a report.
E. CHARGING FOR THE REPORT- If you do not have a prior working relationship/track
record with the individual requesting the report, you should advise
that individual ahead of time of your fee schedule.
- You may want to have the report fee in advance. In that
instance, notify the requesting party of the prepayment requirement.
Immediately upon receiving payment, the report should be completed.
- To determine a reasonable report writing fee, consider how
much time it takes you to prepare the report, how much you actually
earn per hour, and what your peers are charging. The key here is to do
what is "reasonable," knowing that your patient ultimately pays for any
report requested by an attorney.
F. LENGTH OF REPORT- Typically, a good narrative report ranges between three to
seven pages in length, depending on frequency of treatment, the length
of care, the number of interprofessional referrals made, diagnostic
workup, etc.
Whenever an employee from Adler Giersch, P.S., requests you prepare a
report for one of our clients, you are encouraged to call us and
discuss any questions or concerns you have before you begin to write.
The interests of the patient/client and health care provider are best
served when the provider and patient's attorney have effectively
communicated the medical-legal informational needs of the case to one
another.
Very truly yours,
ADLER GIERSCH, P.S.
Richard H. Adler
Attorney at Law
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