Description
INSTRUCTIONS
Part One: Operative Report
Carefully review the operative report for a patient who is having a sling replacement to treat urinary frequency and incontinence. Next, download the Operative Report Template [DOCX] and complete all of the following on the template:
Select 15 misspelled medical terms in the operative report and place them in Column 1.
Translate the 15 misspelled medical terms into commonly used terms in Column 2 correctly.
Place the correctly spelled medical term in Column 3.
Cite in correct APA style the references you used to perform your translation.
Preoperative Diagnosis: Urinary stress incontinence, cystocele.
Postoperative Diagnosis: Same.
Anesthesia: General.
History: This is a 49-year-old female with a history of a histerectomy and bilateral ophorectomy. She complains of urinarie frequency and incontinental. Options were discussed with patient, and she decided to proceed with a sling placement. Risks of the procedure were discussed. They include hemorhage, UTI, pielonephritis, cystitis, vaginitis, MI, DVT, PE, death, et cetera, and were deemed acceptable.
Operative Details: The patient was brought to the ER positioned, prepped and draped in the usual fashion. Time-out was called and patient identity and procedure being performed was validated. A Folley catheter was placed, and the bladder drained. Allis clamps were placed on the posterior vaginal muosa. A small incision was made, and the blader was lifted off of the vaginl mucosa. The cystcele was reduced. At this time, a minor enterocele was noted. Due to the small size, the interocele was not repaired. Bilateral stab incisions were made suprapublically and SPARC needs placed into the superpubic incisions and pulled through the vaginal incisions. The SPARC mesh was attached to the needles and pulled up through the insicions. The mesh was positioned against the mid-urethre, sutured into place, and cut below the surface of the sin. The skin was closed with 4-place suture; the vaginal incision was closed with 0-vicryl. The patient was transferred to the recovery room in stable condition.
Blood Loss: Minimal.
Part Two: HIM Terminology
Write a short, 1–2 page paper on some of the types of documentation used in the HIM field. Be sure your paper includes all of the following headings:
Progress Note.
History and Physical (H&P).
Operative Report.
Discharge Summary.
Under each heading, address each of the following:
Describe the purpose of the document.
Detail the contents included.
Identify settings where the document would be used.
REFERENCE (YOU CAN USE THIS OR OTHER YOU FIND)
Casto, A., Koehler, M., & Lockwood, F. (2017). Clinical terminology: Expanding career pathways for HIM professionals. Journal of AHIMA, 88(9), 50–55.
Russo, R. (2004, October). Documentation and data improvement fundamentals. IFHRO congress & AHIMA convention proceedings. Retrieved from http://bok.ahima.org/doc?oid=60174#.Wl95E66nGUk
******* Part one has been done. You’re only doing part 2 using part one information as well. I’ll attach part one. ********
Additional requirements
Part One: Operative Report
Format: Ensure you complete all columns on the Operative Report Template.
Scoring Guide: Be sure to read the scoring guide for this assessment so you understand how your faculty member will evaluate your work.
Part Two: HIM Terminology
Written communication: Your paper does not need to be in APA format. It does need to be clear and well organized, with correct spelling, grammar, and syntax, to support orderly exposition of content.
Title Page: You do not need to include a title page with your paper. You do need to label it HIM Terminology.
Name: Include your name in the upper right-hand corner on your paper.
Length: Approximately 1–2 typed and double-spaced content pages in Times New Roman, 12-point font, not including the reference page.
References: Include a minimum of one citation of peer-reviewed sources in APA format.