MedEdPORTAL (Aug 2018)

An Interactive Multimodality Curriculum Teaching Medicine Residents About Oncologic Documentation and Billing

  • Arpan Patel,
  • Azka Ali,
  • Forat Lutfi,
  • Adeaze Nwosu-lheme,
  • Merry Jennifer Markham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10746
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Introduction Physicians recognize the importance of clinical documentation for accuracy of coding and billing, but it is emphasized little in residency curricula, with an even smaller emphasis on oncology-specific documentation. We developed an educational curriculum to teach residents about clinical documentation for cancer patients. Our tool kit includes didactics, simulated history and physical (H&P) documentation, and personal feedback. Methods A preintervention survey was first administered to gauge baseline knowledge. A simulated H&P was developed that required participants to complete their own assessment and plan. We delivered a 25-minute lecture regarding billing and coding along with documentation tips and tricks specific to hematology/oncology. Thereafter, we handed out a second H&P, and participants had to once again complete their own assessment and plan. These H&Ps were graded by three reviewers using a rubric. We then gave residents personalized feedback using the above data and administered a postintervention survey. Results The postintervention survey revealed that 100% of the residents surveyed found this activity helpful, 83% noted that further knowledge of diagnosis codes was helpful to their learning, 100% noted that that this activity taught them to improve documentation, 91% said they were more likely to use cancer-specific diagnoses, and 91% said they would benefit from direct feedback-based education. Discussion Didactic and formal education is more effective when combined with hands-on examples and direct personalized feedback.

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