ACTUAL PAPER 2026 QUESTIONS SOLUTIONS
GRADED A+
◉ Discrete Documentation. Answer: Flowsheets are composed of
rows. Each row tracks an individual, discrete piece of information.
Each row allows a specific type of data entry, such as free text,
numeric, selection list, or date/time.
◉ Visit-level Data. Answer: Information filed in flowsheets is specific
to the visit. You can configure a flowsheet to allow either multiple
readings during a single visit or only one reading per visit.
◉ Embed in a navigator section. Answer: You can embed commonly
used flowsheet forms (templates) into navigators. Doing so prevents
your users from needing to leave the navigator to go to the
flowsheets activity.
◉ Data is reviewable elsewhere. Answer: Data entered in flowsheets
can be retrieved and reviewed in many other tools, such as review
flowsheets, print groups, SmartLinks, Reporting Workbench, Clarity,
and BestPractice Advisories.
, ◉ View trending across visits. Answer: You can configure review
flowsheets to display data form the same flowsheets across multiple
(even unrelated) visits. If a visit is part of an episode, you can review
values from other visits in the episode alongside the data from the
current visit. This helps clinicians observe trends and spot potential
problems without having to hunt for data.
◉ Shared Documentation. Answer: If a specific flowsheet row is
used by more than one type of provider ( for example, a physical
therapist and a physical medicine & rehab physician), data from all
those providers is displayed side-by-side when reviewing that data.
◉ Cascading flowsheet. Answer: Flowsheets can be set up to start
with a small number of data entry rows and expand based on values
entered. For example, entering Yes in a row could cause other rows
to cascade in.
◉ Template. Answer: Seen as a "tab" in the flowsheet activity.
◉ Row. Answer: Data is documented here.
◉ Group. Answer: Used to organize individual documentation rows.