Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Week 7

I have finally begun going through the several boxes of records. There are about 43 boxes and each box contains records ranging from closed studies to employee records. My job is to decide which records to keep and which to destroy, which I determine based on the state records retention schedule. If the retention is labeled permanent or is a certain number of years that haven't passed yet, then the records must be kept so they can be scanned in. Records such as those based on hospital policies and procedures which I found today must be kept. I found many documents related to employee profiles from more than a decade back. Records such as those must be destroyed through shredding. However, we are not sure yet as to what to do with documents such as the closed studies, because there is another department in charge of such documents. Next Monday we will meet with representatives of that department to determine what to do with that department's documents.

I was asked previously if there was a way for patients to check their own records with a username and password. I had answered no, but I checked with my mentor today and she told me that patients can actually check their records through a program called MyChart. Sorry for the incorrect answer!

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Week 6

I have finally begun to start going through the boxes of records at the hospital. While the boxes themselves are only labeled by a series of letters and numbers, the folders inside each box have labels designating what they actually are, such as "Meeting Minutes" or "Education." My current job is to go through each box, match each folder with its category on the records retention schedule, and then put a sticky note on the folder with the year the documents are from, what category the folder is part of, and how long the retention period is. For example, folders labeled "Meeting Minutes" have a retention period of "permanent," meaning they must always be kept. Folders labeled "Hiring/Selection Records" must be kept for a period of three years. There are still several boxes to go through containing hundreds, if not thousands, of documents. Next Monday, my mentor and I will meet with representatives from another department in the hospital who will tell us what to do with the boxes, the documents that have passed their retention period, and how/where to scan in the documents that the hospital must still keep.

Monday, March 14, 2016

Week 5: Quick Update

This is just a small update. While I was supposed to begin looking through the boxes of records the department has, I was unable to begin because of some difficulties that came up, such as how to categorize them, what to do with the records, and who to send them to. We will begin going through the records next week once we have this information. Due to this slight setback, I did data entry instead on several different patients as an ongoing side project.

Sunday, March 6, 2016

Week 4

This past week I had the chance to work a little bit with the hospital's system as well as do my own analysis. I was tasked with updating patient information in their electronic system, such as updating insurance information as well as inputting dates.

I conducted analysis on federal and state records retention regulations. I found out that the federal government has set many different retention schedules for several different types of medical documents. Some documents are meant to be kept for three years, while others should be retained for five years. Documents related to Veterans Affairs must be kept for a good 75 years before being destroyed.

Each state government has their own specific records retention regulations as well. Arizona specifically requires patient documents to be retained for six years after treatment by a healthcare providor before being destroyed.