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Medical Services Medical Record Administration and Healthcare PDF

214 Pages·2010·2.33 MB·English
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Army Regulation 40–66 Medical Services Medical Record Administration and Healthcare Documentation Rapid Action Revision (RAR) Issue Date: 4 January 2010 Headquarters Department of the Army Washington, DC 17 June 2008 UNCLASSIFIED SUMMARY of CHANGE AR 40–66 Medical Record Administration and Healthcare Documentation This rapid action revision, dated 4 January 2010-- o Requires the appointment of a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act privacy officer (para 1-4a(6)). o Involves the unit surgeon in the communication of a Soldier’s protected health information to a unit commander (para 1-4a(12)). o Promotes the perception of the medical record as patient-centric rather than provider-centric (para 1-4a(13)). o Outlines the duty of a division, brigade, or battalion surgeon in supporting unit commanders’ decisionmaking (para 1-4e(5)). o Provides for the military treatment facility commander and privacy officer to determine role-based access to protected health information (para 2-2e). o Requires that Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act be accomplished within 30 days of personnel assignment to a military treatment facility and annually during their birth month thereafter (para 2-2e). o Describes the use of protected health information in a military treatment facility directory (para 2-3c). o Allows disclosure of protected health information to a Family member, other relative, or a close personal friend of the individual (para 2-3d). o Permits the disclosure of protected health information to a public or private entity authorized by law or by its charter to assist in disaster relief efforts (para 2-3e). o Identifies regulatory programs that do not require the Soldier’s authorization for protected health information disclosure (para 2-4a). o Provides for the proactive notification of a Soldier’s commander in certain instances (para 2-4a(2)). o Describes the processes for notifying a commander of a Soldier’s protected health information (para 2-4a(3)(a) through 2-4a(3)(d)). o Implements DA Form 3822 (Report of Mental Status Evaluation) (para 2- 4a(3)(c)). o Provides new guidance for sharing a patient’s protected health information with the Department of Veterans Affairs (para 2-4b). o Delineates specific accounting of protected health information disclosures made without patient authorization (para 2-4e). o Permits a patient to receive communications of protected health information by alternate means or at alternate locations (para 2-5o). o Provides for incidental disclosures of protected health information (para 2- 5p). o Requires that entries in all electronic and paper records be made in all inpatient, outpatient, service treatment, dental, Army Substance Abuse Program, and occupational health records by the healthcare provider who observes, treats, or cares for the patient at the time of observation, treatment, or care (paras 3-4a, 8-9). o Provides new Army Substance Abuse Program documentation policy (para 5-22a, 5-22d, 5-22e). o Requires that copies of service treatment records/outpatient treatment records belonging to wounded warriors departing the Army and Family members of wounded warriors be transferred to their civilian provider (para 5-30c and 6-6d). o Provides updated guidance on behavioral health records (para 6-7h). o Implements and integrates DA Form 7656 (Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) Card) into healthcare documentation process (chap 15). o Provides the requirements for use, preparation, and disposition of DA Form 7656 (Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) Card) by first responders, when providing point-of-injury care to Soldiers injured in the theaters of operation (chap 15). o Adds a new key management control test question (para C-4p). o Makes additional rapid action revision changes (chaps 2,3,5,6,8, and 9). Headquarters *Army Regulation 40–66 Department of the Army Washington, DC 17 June 2008 Effective 17 July 2008 Medical Services Medical Record Administration and Healthcare Documentation States, and the U.S. Army Reserve, unless Army management control process. otherwise stated. Also, it applies to other This regulation contains management con- members of the uniformed services of Al- trol provisions and identifies key manage- l i e d n a t i o n s w h o r e c e i v e m e d i c a l t r e a t - ment controls that must be evaluated. (See ment or evaluation in an Army military appendix C.) t r e a t m e n t f a c i l i t y . D u r i n g m o b i l i z a t i o n , the proponent may modify chapters and S u p p l e m e n t a t i o n . S u p p l e m e n t a t i o n o f policies contained in this regulation. this regulation and establishment of com- mand and local forms are prohibited with- Proponent and exception authority. o u t p r i o r a p p r o v a l f r o m T h e S u r g e o n The proponent of this regulation is The General (DASG-HS-AP), 5109 Leesburg Surgeon General. The proponent has the Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041–3258. authority to approve exceptions or waivers to this regulation that are consistent with Suggested improvements. Users are controlling law and regulations. The pro- invited to send comments and suggested ponent may delegate this approval author- improvements on DA Form 2028 (Recom- ity, in writing, to a division chief within History. This publication is a rapid action m e n d e d C h a n g e s t o P u b l i c a t i o n s a n d the proponent agency or its direct report- revision (RAR). This RAR is effective 4 Blank Forms) directly to Office of The ing unit or field operating agency, in the F e b r u a r y 2 0 1 0 . T h e p o r t i o n s a f f e c t e d b y S u r g e o n G e n e r a l ( D A S G - H S - A P ) , 5 1 0 9 grade of colonel or the civilian equivalent. t h i s R A R a r e l i s t e d i n t h e s u m m a r y o f L e e s b u r g P i k e , F a l l s C h u r c h , V A Activities may request a waiver to this change. 22041–3258. regulation by providing justification that S u m m a r y . T h i s r e g u l a t i o n p r e s c r i b e s includes a full analysis of the expected Distribution. This publication is availa- policies for preparing and using medical benefits and must include formal review ble in electronic media only and is in- r e p o r t s a n d r e c o r d s i n a c c o r d a n c e w i t h by the activity’s senior legal officer. All tended for command levels A, B, C, D, North Atlantic Treaty Organization Stand- waiver requests will be endorsed by the and E for the Active Army, the Army ardization Agreements 2348 ED.3(1) and commander or senior leader of the requ- National Guard/Army National Guard of 2 1 3 2 E D . 2 a n d A m e r i c a n – B r i t i s h – e s t i n g a c t i v i t y a n d f o r w a r d e d t h r o u g h Canadian–Australian Quadripartite Stand- t h e i r h i g h e r h e a d q u a r t e r s t o t h e p o l i c y t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s , a n d t h e U . S . A r m y ardization Agreement 470 ED.1. proponent. Refer to AR 25–30 for specific Reserve. Applicability. This regulation applies to guidance. t h e A c t i v e A r m y , t h e A r m y N a t i o n a l Guard/Army National Guard of the United Contents (Listed by paragraph and page number) Chapter 1 Introduction, page 1 Purpose (cid:129) 1–1, page 1 References (cid:129) 1–2, page 1 Explanation of abbreviations and terms (cid:129) 1–3, page 1 Responsibilities (cid:129) 1–4, page 1 Background (cid:129) 1–5, page 3 Record ownership (cid:129) 1–6, page 3 International standardization agreements (cid:129) 1–7, page 4 *This regulation supersedes AR 40–66, dated 21 June 2006. This edition publishes a rapid action revision of AR 40–66. AR 40–66 (cid:129) 17 June 2008/RAR 4 January 2010 i UNCLASSIFIED Contents—Continued Chapter 2 Confidentiality of PHI, page 4 General (cid:129) 2–1, page 4 Policies governing protected health information (cid:129) 2–2, page 4 Release of information when the patient consents to disclosure (cid:129) 2–3, page 5 Disclosure without consent of the patient (cid:129) 2–4, page 7 Processing requests for protected health information, restrictions, and revocations (cid:129) 2–5, page 9 Medical records of teenage Family members (cid:129) 2–6, page 11 Disclosure of medical records containing classified defense information (cid:129) 2–7, page 12 Research using military medical records (cid:129) 2–8, page 13 Chapter 3 Preparation of Medical Records, page 13 Section I Forms and Documents, page 13 Authorized forms and documents (cid:129) 3–1, page 13 Filing electronic/computerized forms (cid:129) 3–2, page 14 Guidelines for local forms and overprints (cid:129) 3–3, page 14 Section II Medical Record Entries, page 15 General (cid:129) 3–4, page 15 Patient identification (cid:129) 3–5, page 16 Facility identification (cid:129) 3–6, page 17 Destruction of unidentifiable medical documents (cid:129) 3–7, page 18 Section III Recording Diagnoses and Procedures, page 18 Nomenclature used in recording diagnoses (cid:129) 3–8, page 18 Special instructions for certain diseases (cid:129) 3–9, page 18 Special instructions for certain diagnoses (cid:129) 3–10, page 18 Recording psychiatric conditions (cid:129) 3–11, page 19 Recording injuries (cid:129) 3–12, page 19 Recording deaths (cid:129) 3–13, page 20 Recording cases observed without treatment, undiagnosed cases, and causes of separation (cid:129) 3–14, page 20 Recording surgical, diagnostic, and therapeutic procedures (cid:129) 3–15, page 20 Recording therapeutic abortions (cid:129) 3–16, page 20 Recording use of restraints/seclusion (cid:129) 3–17, page 21 Recording videotaped documentation of episodes of medical care (cid:129) 3–18, page 21 Section IV Records for Carded–for–Record–Only Cases and Absent–Sick Status, page 21 Carded–for–record–only cases (cid:129) 3–19, page 21 Absent–sick status (cid:129) 3–20, page 21 Section V Detainee Records, page 23 Documentation of detainee care (cid:129) 3–21, page 23 Maintenance and transfer of records (cid:129) 3–22, page 23 Release of information (cid:129) 3–23, page 23 Chapter 4 Filing and Requesting Medical Records, page 23 Filing by Social Security number and Family member prefix (cid:129) 4–1, page 23 Terminal digit filing system (cid:129) 4–2, page 24 ii AR 40–66 (cid:129) 17 June 2008 Contents—Continued Use of DA Form 3443–series, DA Form 3444–series, and DA Form 8005–series folders (cid:129) 4–3, page 24 Preparation of DA Form 3444–series and DA Form 8005–series folders (cid:129) 4–4, page 25 Preparation of DA Form 3443–series folders (cid:129) 4–5, page 26 Record chargeout system (cid:129) 4–6, page 27 Record requests (cid:129) 4–7, page 27 Chapter 5 Service Treatment Records, page 30 Section I General, page 30 Purpose of the service treatment record (cid:129) 5–1, page 30 Use of the service treatment record (cid:129) 5–2, page 31 For whom prepared and maintained (cid:129) 5–3, page 32 Forms and documents of service treatment records (cid:129) 5–4, page 32 DA Form 5007A and DA Form 5007B (cid:129) 5–5, page 32 DA Form 5008 (cid:129) 5–6, page 32 DA Form 5181 (cid:129) 5–7, page 32 DA Form 5569 (cid:129) 5–8, page 32 DA Form 5570 (cid:129) 5–9, page 32 DD Form 2882 (cid:129) 5–10, page 32 DD Form 1380 (cid:129) 5–11, page 33 DD Form 2482 (cid:129) 5–12, page 33 DD Form 2766 and DD Form 2766C (cid:129) 5–13, page 33 DD Form 2813 (cid:129) 5–14, page 33 SF 512 (cid:129) 5–15, page 34 SF 558 (cid:129) 5–16, page 34 SF 559 (cid:129) 5–17, page 34 SF 600 (cid:129) 5–18, page 34 Immunization documentation (DD Form 2766, SF 601, and CDC Form 731) (cid:129) 5–19, page 36 SF 603 and SF 603A (cid:129) 5–20, page 37 Other forms filed in the service treatment record (cid:129) 5–21, page 38 Service treatment records with behavioral health documentation (cid:129) 5–22, page 40 Access to service treatment records (cid:129) 5–23, page 40 Cross–servicing of service treatment records (cid:129) 5–24, page 41 Section II Initiating, Keeping, and Disposing of Service Treatment Records, page 41 Initiating service treatment records (cid:129) 5–25, page 41 Transferring service treatment records (cid:129) 5–26, page 42 Handcarrying medical records (cid:129) 5–27, page 43 Establishing “temporary” and “new” service treatment records (cid:129) 5–28, page 44 Filing service treatment records (cid:129) 5–29, page 44 Disposing of service treatment records (cid:129) 5–30, page 46 Section III Special Considerations for Personnel Reliability Program Service Treatment Records and Civilian Employee Medical Records, page 46 Screening Personnel Reliability Program records (cid:129) 5–31, page 46 Maintaining Personnel Reliability Program records (cid:129) 5–32, page 46 Section IV Maintenance of Service Treatment Records and Civilian Employee Medical Records Upon Mobilization, page 47 Paper service treatment records of deployed military members and deployed civilians (cid:129) 5–33, page 47 Preparation of service treatment record forms (cid:129) 5–34, page 47 AR 40–66 (cid:129) 17 June 2008 iii Contents—Continued Use of field files/DD Form 2766 (cid:129) 5–35, page 48 Health assessments after deployment (cid:129) 5–36, page 48 Operation after hostilities cease (cid:129) 5–37, page 49 Chapter 6 Outpatient Treatment Records, page 66 Section I General, page 66 For whom prepared (cid:129) 6–1, page 66 Outpatient treatment record forms and documents: Guidelines for paper record preparation and use (cid:129) 6–2, page 66 Section II Initiating, Keeping, and Disposing of Outpatient Treatment Records, page 67 Initiating and keeping outpatient treatment records (cid:129) 6–3, page 67 Transferring outpatient treatment records (cid:129) 6–4, page 67 Requests other than DD Form 2138 (cid:129) 6–5, page 68 Disposition (cid:129) 6–6, page 68 Section III Preparation and Use of Outpatient Treatment Records, page 69 Preparation (cid:129) 6–7, page 69 Use (cid:129) 6–8, page 70 Chapter 7 Occupational Health Program Civilian Employee Medical Record, page 83 Section I General, page 83 Compliance (cid:129) 7–1, page 83 Definition and purpose of the civilian employee medical record (cid:129) 7–2, page 83 For whom prepared (cid:129) 7–3, page 83 Civilian employee medical records folder and forms (cid:129) 7–4, page 83 Section II Maintaining, Transferring, and Disposing of Civilian Employee Medical Records and Retention of Job–Related X–Ray Films, page 84 Custody and maintenance of civilian employee medical records (cid:129) 7–5, page 84 Medical record entries (cid:129) 7–6, page 84 Recording occupational injuries and illnesses (cid:129) 7–7, page 84 Cross–coding of medical records (cid:129) 7–8, page 84 Transferring and retiring civilian employee medical records (cid:129) 7–9, page 85 Retention of job–related x–ray films (cid:129) 7–10, page 85 Section III Confidentiality of PHI, Access to Civilian Employee Medical Records, and Performance Improvement, page 85 Protection of confidentiality and disclosure procedures (cid:129) 7–11, page 85 Civilian employee medical record review (cid:129) 7–12, page 85 Chapter 8 Army Substance Abuse Program Outpatient Medical Record, page 90 Section I General, page 90 For whom prepared (cid:129) 8–1, page 90 Access (cid:129) 8–2, page 90 iv AR 40–66 (cid:129) 17 June 2008 Contents—Continued Disclosure of information (cid:129) 8–3, page 90 Forms and documents (cid:129) 8–4, page 91 Section II Initiating, Maintaining, and Disposing of Army Substance Abuse Program Outpatient Medical Records, page 91 Initiating and maintaining (cid:129) 8–5, page 91 Transferring (cid:129) 8–6, page 91 Requests other than DD Form 2138 (cid:129) 8–7, page 91 Disposition (cid:129) 8–8, page 91 Section III Preparation and Use of Army Substance Abuse Program Outpatient Medical Records, page 91 Preparation (cid:129) 8–9, page 91 Use (cid:129) 8–10, page 92 Chapter 9 Inpatient Treatment Records, page 94 Section I General, page 94 For whom prepared (cid:129) 9–1, page 94 Inpatient forms and documents (cid:129) 9–2, page 95 Fetal monitoring strips (cid:129) 9–3, page 95 Section II Initiating, Keeping, and Disposing of Inpatient Treatment Records, page 96 General (cid:129) 9–4, page 96 Records for Ambulatory Procedure Visit patients (cid:129) 9–5, page 96 NATO STANAG 2348 ED.3(1) requirements (cid:129) 9–6, page 96 Inpatient treatment records of AWOL patients (cid:129) 9–7, page 96 Five–year inpatient treatment record maintenance (cid:129) 9–8, page 96 Access and audit trail (cid:129) 9–9, page 96 Disposition of inpatient treatment records (cid:129) 9–10, page 97 Section III Preparation and Use of Inpatient Treatment Records, page 97 Inpatient treatment records content (cid:129) 9–11, page 97 Medical reports (cid:129) 9–12, page 98 Nursing process documentation (cid:129) 9–13, page 100 Countersignatures (cid:129) 9–14, page 102 Section IV DA Form 3647, page 103 General purpose (cid:129) 9–15, page 103 Use (cid:129) 9–16, page 103 Initiation and disposition (cid:129) 9–17, page 103 Preparation (cid:129) 9–18, page 103 Corrections and corrected copies (cid:129) 9–19, page 103 Section V Preparation and Use of Other Inpatient Treatment Record Forms, page 104 DD Form 2569 (cid:129) 9–20, page 104 DD Form 2770 (cid:129) 9–21, page 104 DA Form 4359 (cid:129) 9–22, page 104 DD Form 792 (cid:129) 9–23, page 104 DA Form 3950 (cid:129) 9–24, page 104 AR 40–66 (cid:129) 17 June 2008 v Contents—Continued Laboratory test requisition and reporting forms (cid:129) 9–25, page 104 DA Form 4256 (cid:129) 9–26, page 105 DA Form 4677 (cid:129) 9–27, page 106 DA Form 4678 (cid:129) 9–28, page 107 DA Form 4107 (cid:129) 9–29, page 108 DA Form 7001 (cid:129) 9–30, page 109 DD Form 1924 (cid:129) 9–31, page 110 DA Form 4108 (cid:129) 9–32, page 110 DA Form 5179 (cid:129) 9–33, page 111 DA Form 5179–1 (cid:129) 9–34, page 111 SF 511 (cid:129) 9–35, page 112 SF 519–B (cid:129) 9–36, page 112 DA Form 5009 (cid:129) 9–37, page 113 Chapter 10 Extended Ambulatory Records, page 124 Section I General, page 124 Purpose of the extended ambulatory record (cid:129) 10–1, page 124 For whom prepared (cid:129) 10–2, page 124 Extended ambulatory record forms and documents (cid:129) 10–3, page 124 Section II Initiating, Keeping, and Disposing of Extended Ambulatory Records, page 124 Initiating extended ambulatory records (cid:129) 10–4, page 124 Five–year/one–year extended ambulatory record maintenance (cid:129) 10–5, page 124 Disposition of extended ambulatory records (cid:129) 10–6, page 125 Section III Preparation and Use of Extended Ambulatory Records, page 125 Preparation of extended ambulatory records (cid:129) 10–7, page 125 Use of extended ambulatory records (cid:129) 10–8, page 125 Chapter 11 DD Form 1380, page 129 Use (cid:129) 11–1, page 129 Preparation (cid:129) 11–2, page 129 Supplemental DD Form 1380 (cid:129) 11–3, page 130 Disposition (cid:129) 11–4, page 130 DA Form 4006 (cid:129) 11–5, page 130 Chapter 12 Role of the Medical Department Activity or U.S. Army Medical Center Patient Administration Division in the Improving Organizational Performance Process, page 132 General (cid:129) 12–1, page 132 Internal performance improvement process for medical record services (cid:129) 12–2, page 132 Patient care assessment (cid:129) 12–3, page 132 Patient Administration Division role in handling medical records in the Risk Management Program (cid:129) 12–4, page 133 Chapter 13 DD Form 689, page 134 Purpose and use (cid:129) 13–1, page 134 Issuing authority (cid:129) 13–2, page 134 Procedures (cid:129) 13–3, page 134 Service treatment record entry (cid:129) 13–4, page 136 vi AR 40–66 (cid:129) 17 June 2008

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Army Regulation 40–66 Medical Services Medical Record Administration and Healthcare Documentation Headquarters Department of the Army Washington, DC
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.