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MO 260 Unit Two Clinical Skills for the Medical Office Manager

MO 260 Unit Two Clinical Skills for the Medical Office Manager

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Page 1: MO 260 Unit Two Clinical Skills for the Medical Office Manager

MO 260 Unit Two

Clinical Skills for the Medical Office Manager

Page 2: MO 260 Unit Two Clinical Skills for the Medical Office Manager

Agenda Agenda ◦Review Unit One◦Overview Unit Two◦Discussion/Presentation

Discussion Board-Good Samaritan Laws (1st choice)

Seminar Discussion-Patient History Form/Medical Records Video

Unit Two Activities/Readings Asepsis-Infection Control/OSHA/Biohazardous Waste Prepping Patient Exam Room Obtaining Patient Vital Signs In-House Emergencies

◦Questions weekly deliverables ??

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Let’s Review

• Patient Termination• Professionalism• License renewal-Physician & CMA/RMA• Liability & HIPAA• www.youtube.com/watch?v=fTjZ7GokQw4

• The Patient Chart• Our Discussion Board

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Unit Two Unit Two

Discussion –Good Samaritan Seminar-Here we are!AssignmentAssessment

◦ Activities Asepsis, Prep Pt Room, Basic Charting,

Emergencies

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On the Discussion Board: Good Samaritan On the Discussion Board: Good Samaritan LawsLaws

STATEMENT

 

This bill supplements the "Good Samaritan Act," P.L.1963, c.140 (C.2A:62A-1 et seq.) to clarify that the immunity from liability for civil damages afforded under that act extends to include municipal, county and State firefighters, both paid or volunteer, who render emergency assistance at the scene of an accident.

Under common law, while a person is under no obligation to provide emergency assistance at the scene of an accident, a person who chooses to do so may be held civilly liable if he or she is found to have acted in a negligent manner. To encourage individuals to render assistance at accident scenes, New Jersey and many other states have adopted "Good Samaritan" acts to provide civil immunity for individuals who in good faith render emergency care at the scene of an accident or in an emergency.

In its present form, New Jersey's "Good Samaritan Act" provides immunity to (1) any individual, including health care professionals; (2) the members of volunteer first aid, rescue and ambulance squads and (3) municipal, county and State law enforcement officers, who in good faith render emergency care at the scene of an accident or in an emergency or who, in the case of volunteer members or first aid, rescue and ambulance squads, transport the victims of an accident or emergency to a hospital or other facility for treatment. This bill would add municipal, county and State firefighters, both paid and volunteer, to those specifically afforded immunity under the "Good Samaritan Act."

  Resource: http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/9899/Bills/a2500/2270_i1.pdf

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Medical History: Collecting the informationMedical History: Collecting the information

Besides being useful for diagnosing and treating the patient, the self-history allows the patient more participation in the process.

The form may be mailed to the patient’s home before the appointment or may be completed in the office during the first visit.

If you are responsible for taking a portion of the medical history, conduct the interview in a private area free from outside interference and beyond the hearing range of other patients.

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Seminar DiscussionSeminar Discussion

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The Importance of Medical The Importance of Medical RecordsRecords

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http://youtu.be/TZzIw6RpQVg

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Aseptic Techniques: Aseptic Techniques: Prevention of Disease TransmissionPrevention of Disease Transmission

Medical asepsis.Surgical asepsis. Medical aseptic techniques: Create an

environment as free of pathogens as possible to prevent reinfection or cross-infection.

Surgical aseptic or sterile technique: Used when the patient’s skin or mucous membranes are disrupted. Prevents patient exposure to all microbes (e.g., for minor surgery, urinary catheterizations, injections).

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Asepsis: Asepsis: Removing pathogenic Removing pathogenic organisms or protecting against organisms or protecting against infection by these organismsinfection by these organismsHandwashingSanitizationDisinfectionSterilization

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OSHA Standards for Healthcare OSHA Standards for Healthcare WorkersWorkersHealthcare workers face significant

health risks from occupational exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials that may contain hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), or the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

The MA should use precautions for all patients, regardless of knowledge of their individual health histories.

Implementation of the Bloodborne Pathogen Standard also protects patients from any blood-borne infection the healthcare worker may be carrying.

Page 15: MO 260 Unit Two Clinical Skills for the Medical Office Manager

Chain of InfectionChain of InfectionInfectious diseases can spread only

if certain factors occur. These factors, or links, make up the chain of infection. Break the chain, and you break the infectious process.

The chain begins with the infectious agent, which invades the reservoir host, and continues with the means or portal of exit from the host, the method of transmission, the means or portal of entry into a new host, and the presence of a susceptible host.

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Chain of InfectionChain of Infection

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TransmissionTransmissionDirect—contact with infected

person or with discharges (feces, urine, sputum, etc.)

Indirect—from droplets expelled with coughing, sneezing, or speaking; vectors; contaminated food; contaminated objects called fomites.

Controlled with sanitization, disinfection, sterilization, and so on

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Exposure Control PlanExposure Control PlanPlan must detail employee protection

procedures.Must identify job classifications and/or

specific work-related tasks that might lead to exposure.

Must contain specifics on controls including PPE, training, hepatitis B immunization, record keeping, postexposure follow-up, and labeling and disposal of biohazard waste.

Must be reviewed and updated at least annually to incorporate the use of safer medical devices.

Must be available to employees for review and training.

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Biohazardous Waste

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Basic ChartingBasic ChartingInterviewing the patient

◦Open ended/closed ended questions◦Documenting on the progress notes

Soap notes: Subjective, Objective, Assessment and Plan

◦Source Oriented/Problem Oriented Charts

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In-House Emergency In-House Emergency GuidelinesGuidelinesWhat is the office policy?What types of emergencies can

occur in the medical office? Who is the decision maker?Who calls 911?What equipment should you

have?Healthcare Provider CPR?