5.4 Consent Forms and Encounter Documentation
Key Takeaways
- General consent for treatment is obtained at registration and covers routine office services
- Informed consent is required for procedures with significant risk and must be obtained by the provider, not the CMAA
- The medical record is a legal document — all entries must be accurate, timely, legible, and signed
- Encounter documentation follows the SOAP format: Subjective, Objective, Assessment, Plan
- CMAAs may enter demographic data, update patient information, scan documents, and input administrative data into the EHR
- Amendments to the medical record must never involve deleting or obscuring original entries — use addendums or corrections per policy
Consent Forms and Encounter Documentation
Proper consent and documentation practices protect both the patient and the practice. Understanding the types of consent and documentation standards is essential for CMAA exam success.
Types of Consent
| Type | What It Covers | Who Obtains It | When |
|---|---|---|---|
| Implied consent | Routine, non-invasive care | N/A — assumed by the patient presenting for care | Patient arrives and extends their arm for blood pressure measurement |
| General consent (consent for treatment) | Routine medical office services | CMAA collects the signed form | At registration |
| Informed consent | Procedures with significant risk (surgery, invasive tests) | Provider only — CMAA may witness the signature | Before the procedure |
| Consent for release of information | Sharing PHI with specific parties | CMAA collects the signed form | When the patient authorizes release of records |
The SOAP Note Format
The SOAP format is the standard documentation method for medical encounters:
| Component | Content | Who Documents |
|---|---|---|
| S — Subjective | Patient's complaints, symptoms, and history in their own words (chief complaint, HPI) | Provider (with input from clinical staff) |
| O — Objective | Measurable findings: vital signs, physical exam, lab results, diagnostic findings | Provider and clinical staff |
| A — Assessment | Provider's diagnosis or differential diagnoses | Provider only |
| P — Plan | Treatment plan: medications, referrals, follow-up, patient education, procedures | Provider only |
CMAA Role in SOAP Notes: CMAAs do not write SOAP notes. However, they may enter data that supports the note, such as patient demographic updates, scanned documents, and administrative information. Understanding the format helps CMAAs interpret documentation and communicate effectively with clinical staff.
Medical Record Documentation Standards
General Principles
| Standard | Description |
|---|---|
| Accuracy | All entries must be factually correct and objective |
| Timeliness | Document events as close to the time of occurrence as possible |
| Completeness | Include all relevant information; nothing important should be omitted |
| Legibility | Handwritten entries must be readable (EHR largely eliminates this issue) |
| Authentication | All entries must be signed (or electronically authenticated) by the author |
| Objectivity | Document facts, not opinions; use objective medical language |
Correcting Medical Record Errors
Paper Records:
- Draw a single line through the error (the original must remain readable)
- Write "error" or "correction" above the line
- Date, time, and initial the correction
- Enter the correct information nearby
- Never use correction fluid, erase, or obliterate the original entry
Electronic Records:
- Use the EHR's correction/addendum feature
- The original entry is preserved with a notation that a correction was made
- The corrected information is added with the author, date, and time
- Audit trails track all changes automatically
Documents CMAAs Scan and Manage
| Document Type | Action |
|---|---|
| Insurance cards | Scan front and back into the patient's account |
| Photo ID | Scan per office policy for identity verification records |
| Specialist reports | Scan consultation notes received from specialists into the chart |
| Lab results | If received on paper, scan into the chart and route to the provider for review |
| Signed consent forms | Scan into the patient's chart |
| Advance directives | Scan and flag the chart so providers are aware |
| Correspondence | Letters from insurance companies, attorneys, or other entities |
| Imaging reports | Scan radiology reports from external facilities |
Authorization for Release of Information
When a request for medical records is received, the CMAA must verify:
| Verification Step | Details |
|---|---|
| Valid authorization | Signed by the patient (or legal representative), dated, specifies what information to release, names the recipient |
| Expiration | The authorization has not expired |
| Specific information | Release only the records specified in the authorization |
| Minimum necessary | Apply the minimum necessary standard for non-treatment disclosures |
| Documentation | Log the disclosure for HIPAA accounting of disclosures requirements |
An error is discovered in a patient's paper medical record. What is the correct way to correct it?
In a SOAP note, where would you find the provider's diagnosis?
A new patient arrives but forgot their insurance card. They state they have Blue Cross Blue Shield. What should the CMAA do?
Which form authorizes the insurance company to pay the healthcare provider directly rather than sending payment to the patient?
A patient with a $40 specialist copay hands the CMAA a $50 bill. What should the CMAA do?
During patient checkout, the provider's instructions state "return in 6 weeks for follow-up." What is the BEST action for the CMAA?