– Core Questions And Answers With Verified
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Functional type - CORRECT ANSWES -- Restricts the activities/scenarios in which a
SmartText may be used. A functional type must be specified in the SmartText Record.
An example is MR Charting.
historical immunization - CORRECT ANSWES -- An immunization that a clinician is
documenting that was completed prior to the current encounter.
Ease of Configuration - CORRECT ANSWES -- Flowsheets are built in Hyperspace
and are fairly intuitive to build and edit.
Discrete Documentation - CORRECT ANSWES -- 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 - CORRECT ANSWES -- 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 - CORRECT ANSWES -- 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 - CORRECT ANSWES -- 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 - CORRECT ANSWES -- 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 - CORRECT ANSWES -- 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 - CORRECT ANSWES -- 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 - CORRECT ANSWES -- Seen as a "tab" in the flowsheet activity.
Row - CORRECT ANSWES -- Data is documented here.
Group - CORRECT ANSWES -- Used to organize individual documentation rows.
Detail Report - CORRECT ANSWES -- Provides clinicians extra details about the row
they are documenting in, like minimum and maximum values, and who documented on
the row last.
Flowsheet Groups - CORRECT ANSWES -- Record that organizes flowsheet rows
Flowsheet Rows - CORRECT ANSWES -- Record where data is recorded. Designed
to hold specific data.
Flowsheet Template - CORRECT ANSWES -- Record that organizes flowsheet
groups. Used to group similar categories of documentation together. Appears as a tab
in the flowsheet activity.
Table of Contents - CORRECT ANSWES -- Topics are listed here within flowsheet
templates to make it easier for clinicians to navigate flowsheet groups. When clinicians
are documenting flowsheet information in the Flowsheets activity, they can click on a
topic within this section to expand the groups within it and jump directly to the first group
in the topic.
Row Types - CORRECT ANSWES -- Defines the purpose for a record. Ex: Flowsheet
Group, Properties, Data, etc.
Value Types - CORRECT ANSWES -- Defines the information you are entering in a
row. Changes based on what selection is made for row types.
Group Form - CORRECT ANSWES -- Located in a flowsheet group record where you
can specify all the rows that should normally show up in the group by default.
Topic Column - CORRECT ANSWES -- Organizes similar groups together under the
table of contents in a flowsheet template.
Flowsheet - CORRECT ANSWES -- A customizable documentation tool typically used
in specialties that need to capture a wide variety of information discretely.