Health Records Management
Career Diploma
Health Records Management Course Outline
The Health Records Course is comprised of 9 comprehensive lessons. They are easy to follow, yet challenging and stimulating at the same time. Each lesson begins with a subject matter preview and objectives, an introductory note from your instructor and a vocabulary builder of new words and terms.
Next comes the reading assignment. Practice exercises help you check and review what you've learned. At the end of the lesson is an open-book exam, which you may take online.
Lesson 1: Basic Medical Terminology
An introduction to fundamental word elements and word combinations relevant to basic medical and dental terminology; common medical and anatomical vocabulary; specialization areas of the medical profession; common departments and their primary functions in the typical hospital or health facility.
Lesson 2: HIPAA, the Patient Chart and the Release of Patient Information
The layout and organization of the patient chart; the impact of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) on the use and disclosure of personal health information; compliance regulations pertaining to healthcare providers that are the responsibility of Health Records Specialists.
Lesson 3: Health Insurance Carriers and Claims
The major medical insurance programs; procedural and diagnostic coding; procedures for filling out and filing insurance claim forms; types of patient information requested by health insurance carriers for determining coverage and medical necessity; information required to support health insurance claims submitted by providers.
Lesson 4: Electronic Medical Record Systems
Replacing paper-based charts with electronic medical record systems (EMR); computerized optical scanning and storage systems to replace microfilm and microfiche systems.
Time Management Guide
How to improve your efficiency and productivity as a student and later in your health records career.
Lesson 5: The Health Information Management Department
The role of the health records clerk; job functions; career opportunities; functions of the health information management department – including storage and retrieval, release of information, coding, corporate compliance and abstracting; assembling the medical record; transcription; the cancer registry; risk management.
Lesson 6: Filing Methods and Medical Record Processing
Alphabetic filing; numeric filing; digit filing; unit and serial numbering; color coding; outguides; filing loose documents; step-by-step filing procedure for filing a record using terminal digit filing; batch filing; master patient index and file errors; computerized master patient indexes; admission and discharge processing; record retrieval; procedure for locating misfiles.
Lesson 7: The Assembly and Contents of the Medical Record
Medical records documents; the face sheet; signature profile; discharge summary; coding summary; physician orders; history and physical; consultation reports; progress notes; critical care/second visit notes; laboratory test results; cancer, pathology, radiology and procedure/operative reports; anesthesia documentation; operating room and clinical record; filing surgical documents; nursing documentation; ancillary reports; consents; record of death; autopsy report; transfer record; OB/newborn record; rehabilitation records; psychiatric records; permanent dividers.
Lesson 8: Medical Record Analysis and the Physician Incomplete Area
Completion requirements; history and physical; consultation reports; discharge summary; test results; orders and progress notes; anesthesia records; nursing and ancillary services records; deficiency slips; physician notification procedure; incomplete record filing; pulling records for physician completion; physician incomplete area; working with physicians; reporting problems; updating files after completion; computerized deficiency slip; final check; record filed incomplete; delinquent record statistics.
Lesson 9: Protecting Patient Confidentiality and Other Functions of the Medical Records Clerk
Confidentiality of the medical record; release without patient consent; release requiring patient consent; Federal Privacy Act of 1974; confidentiality of substance abuse treatment records; Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA); confidentiality of psychiatric records; patient access to records; release of information; procedure for processing mail requests; processing birth certificates; newborn test results; health records functions of the transcription clerk, case management clerk, cancer registry clerk, outpatient clinic clerk, and optical imaging clerk.
Career Search Guide
Locating the best opportunities; assembling your resume; interview preparation; landing the job you want.
Ready to get started on your Health Records Management training? Enroll online or call 1-800-957-5412 to speak with an Admissions Advisor.