Orangeredblooded
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A lot of times it's because the second hospital won't load disks to their systems in case there is a virus. They can't risk having their electronic records systems corrupted, whether accidentally or maliciously.I ran into the same thing at Vanderbilt. I had to get a copy of my disc from my local hospital, because they wouldn't send a copy to them. I don't know if it's about competition or what.
Did they do the scans at the Knoxville CBOC? If so, it's in CPRS (VA electronic record), and they have access in Nashville, and they shouldn't need physical disks. Weird.I just talked to the VA to find out about my consult. Everything is in Nashville, for them to set it up. One minor hitch. They also need the disc with my scans on it sent to Nashville also, so they can review them. So, I will be going to Knoxville one day this week (they want them this week) to pick them up. Would have been nice to know this earlier instead of me having to call and find out. Geez.
I pull up scanned-in records when I'm trying to code contract nursing home charts, and the patient came from a non-VA hospital. Sometimes I get something useful (OMG, a discharge summary!!), and other times it's hundreds of pages of labs and nursing notes. Lots of entries about soft, brown formed stools...You would think. Along with records. You never knew what you were going to get when we subpoenaed records. Sometimes it was nothing, and other times it was 2500 pages of paper.
I used to work for an internal medicine group. Lots of older patients. One of the hemoccult envelopes came to the office (I took them to the lab when the mail was delivered), and it was thick. The little man didn't understand what to do, so he used the tissue in the kit to wrap up a sample.I pull up scanned-in records when I'm trying to code contract nursing home charts, and the patient came from a non-VA hospital. Sometimes I get something useful (OMG, a discharge summary!!), and other times it's hundreds of pages of labs and nursing notes. Lots of entries about soft, brown formed stools...
It's amazing how some are very detailed and some are not. I remember in one case the daughter was suing her dad because he got in a wreck, and her child was in the backseat, claiming the child was injured. It was a single car accident, he had passed out and wrecked. The childs records had nothing helpful. We actually got the dads records since he was our client - but his were highly detailed to the point that it talked about the daughter bringing him in concerned about his health and well being - which was before the accident. It's like thanks for helping out case out!I pull up scanned-in records when I'm trying to code contract nursing home charts, and the patient came from a non-VA hospital. Sometimes I get something useful (OMG, a discharge summary!!), and other times it's hundreds of pages of labs and nursing notes. Lots of entries about soft, brown formed stools...
lol, bless his heart!I used to work for an internal medicine group. Lots of older patients. One of the hemoccult envelopes came to the office (I took them to the lab when the mail was delivered), and it was thick. The little man didn't understand what to do, so he used the tissue in the kit to wrap up a sample.