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Common problems

All of the following can compromise patient safety or lead to medicolegal problems:
  • Not recording negative findings
  • Not recording substance of discussions about the risks and benefits of proposed treatments
  • Not recording drug allergies or adverse reactions
  • Not recording the results of investigations and tests
  • Illegible entries
  • Not reading the notes when seeing a patient
  • Making derogatory comments
  • Altering notes after the event
  • Wrong patient/wrong notes.
Before the healthcare professional makes an entry in the patient’s healthcare record, s/he shall establish that the record belongs to the patient being attended

Box 4: HSE guidance on identifying patients

3.3.1 The service user¹s name is on each side of each page where service user information is documented and each side of each page has the correct unique service user identification number and/or identification label. This requirement also applies to every screen on computerised systems.

3.3.2 Where appropriate, before the healthcare professional makes an entry in the service user¹s healthcare record, s/he establishes that the record belongs to the service user being attended.

3.3.3 This is done by verifying name and date of birth with the service user and for in-patients/day-cases by cross-referencing the service user¹s identification band with the healthcare record.

National Hospitals Office, Standards and Recommended Practices for Healthcare Records Management (2011).