Q&A: Facility policies should dictate whether queries are part of the medical record
Q: If a CDI specialist or coder queries a physician and the response is written on the query letter is it legal to code from this? Or should the physician only respond in his or her progress note or discharge summary? Also, can the facility make the query letter part of the medical chart?
A: The answer is, as with many situations, it depends. If the form that the coder uses has been approved as permanent part of the medical record, then the physician may reply on this form and the answer can be coded.
The term “legal” implies something governed by state or federal law. To the best of my knowledge, legal precedent has not been established addressing the use of physician query forms. Whether queries (either concurrent, retrospective, or both) are considered a permanent part of the record is a decision determined by individual facilities—generally after consulting the compliance officer and legal counsel.
- contain compliant, non-leading language,
- include patient-specific clinical indicators
- provide clinically appropriate choices
- not lead the physician to only one diagnostic option