When I started working as a home health Physical Therapist, I looked everywhere for home health documentation examples.
I entered the world of home health from an outpatient clinic, so finding efficient ways to document in the home health setting was difficult at first.
When I figured out the basic outline of a good home health eval, daily note progress note and discharge, I decreased my documentation time by 50%.
It saved me at least an hour each day, which is a big deal when you’re paid per visit.
In this article, I’ll share how I created my own home health templates and share how much time they’ve saved me.
Home Health Documentation Examples
The amount of time it takes to write home health physical therapy documentation (and occupational therapy documentation) will vary depending on the type of note you’re writing. Most therapists eventually come up with some sort of home health template or system to save time when documenting their treatment, but if you’re new to home health, it’s hard to know what to expect!
Creating Home Health Documentation Example Templates
If you’re fortunate to know a therapist at your home health agency who is willing to give you a few of their templated phrases or examples, that’s a huge time saver!
But it can be really kind of awkward asking another therapist if you can have a copy of their personal ‘home health documentation cheat sheet.’
They’ve probably spent hours creating their own unique documentation phrases and they might hesitate giving them to you for various reasons.
When I started as a home health therapist, I made meticulous notes from the therapists who trained me and used their examples to create my own documentation cheat sheets which included:
- Full Home Health Narrative Notes
- Evaluation Summaries
- Physician Verbal Order Templates
- Treatment Note Examples / Flowsheets
- Assessment Phrases & Discharge Summaries
- Entire Therapy Documentation Examples
I spent weeks organizing my notes and creating home health templates that worked for me. For almost an entire year, I kept refining my cheat sheet and created my own little system.
So was it worth it? ABSOLUTELY!
Using my own home health documentation templates, I was able to save 5 to 10 minutes per patient each day.
Just to give you an idea, I might see 5 to 6 patients on a regular day: 2 evals, 3 follow up visits, and a discharge. So saving 10 minutes per patient was an entire hour saved each day!
Since I’m paid per visit, saving time is critical, especially since I’m not paid an hourly rate to do my notes!
I highly encourage you to take a few weeks to create your own home health templates, but if you want a copy of my entire documentation template, you can find the bundle here.
Therapy Documentation Example Time Estimates:
Start of Care – Plan to spend at least 1.5 hours with the patient and 1.5 hours completing the note after the visit. Start of care documentation takes the longest, especially with the newest OASIS changes.
Evaluation – Plan to spend at least 1 hour with the patient and up to 45 minutes after the visit to complete the evaluation note.
Visit Note – For regular follow up visits, plan to spend 30 to 60 minutes with the patient and up to 20 minutes to complete the ‘daily note.’ If you’re efficient, you can often complete the entire note during the home health visit!
Reassessment Note – In Home Health therapy, reassessments are basically like a progress note and take a little longer than a regular visit to complete. Plan to spend 45 to 60 minutes with the patient and up to 20-30 minutes to complete a reassessment note.
Discharge Notes – Plan to spend 30 to 60 minutes with the patient for a discharge visit and an additional 30 minutes after the visit completing the documentation. An OASIS discharge will take longer to complete than a non-OASIS discharge
Download the Home Health Documentation Templates
If you’re a new home health therapist, this guide will save you time and headache as you can actually spend more time focusing on the patient’s needs and treatment.
If you are a veteran home health therapist, this guide can give you fresh ideas on ways to efficiently document your treatments.
Here’s what’s included in the Home Health Documentation Template:
-
Initial Evaluation Summary Example
-
Physician Verbal Order Examples and Script Template
-
Objective Measurement Handout
-
Daily Note Assessment & Documentation of Treatment
-
Progress Note Statements on Goals
-
Discharge Summary Examples
-
Goal Setting Template and Examples
The assessment phrases and narrative note examples are enough to save you at least 5 minutes per patient. With 6 patients a day, that saves you 30 minutes each day.
Therapy Documentation Template Bundle
I mentioned that I spent an entire year crafting my templates and creating a system that saved me time. You can see the entire system in the bundle below, which includes:
- Assessment Templates
- Goal Templates
- Treatment Flowsheets
- Stick Figure Exercises – A huge time saver for home health therapists!
What is your time worth in the evening? Personally, I would have paid over $100 to someone for their documentation templates if it would save me over 3 hours a week in documentation headaches! 🙂
Start your home health career off right with the first and only home health template documentation guide available online. Written by a therapist, for therapists.
Home care is the setting where most patients feel most comfortable and empowered to work toward greater independence. For clinicians, this setting can be the most rewarding and challenging for our time management skills.
For example, Nancy is a 73-year-old woman receiving home health services after a right hip fracture treated with a total hip arthroplasty. She also has diabetes, which is managed poorly, resulting in proprioceptive deficits. She lives with her spouse, who is able to assist with care. She is alert and oriented but experiences difficulty managing her pain with complaints of 5/10 at rest.
The SBAR template technique can assist us in organizing the content of a home visit:
S: Situation
Briefly describe the context of your treatment session. Specify the activity the patient is performing. Emphasize the skilled intervention you provide.
Example: Patient seen for assessment of tub transfers and instruction in use of bathroom safety equipment.
B: Background
Provide supportive information relevant to the patient’s participation in the therapy session. This can be qualifying information that captures the patient’s/caregiver’s level of participation, or their ability for new learning and recall. The patient’s past/current medical information and pain level may also be relevant.
Example: Patient and caregiver are agreeable to use of equipment. At rest patient reports pain of 5/10. Patient medicated prior to session.
A: Assessment
This section can include both the skilled intervention you provided along with the patient and caregiver’s response to your instruction. Limit the content to phrases and bullet points that are action oriented, highlighting your specific skill. In documenting the patient and caregiver’s response, consider measurable terms as a way to show progress toward the short-term or long-term goals identified in your plan of care.
Example:
- Instructed: Fall risk with stand step transfer secondary to bilateral lower extremity sensory motor deficits.
- Patient Return Demonstration: Patient and caregiver unable to verbalize fall risk prior to instruction. Performed seated transfer technique with moderate assistance to lift right lower extremity and maintain hip precautions. Pain reportedly increased to 7/10 during task.
R: Recommendation
The last section of documentation is focused on recommending steps you as the provider will take to assist the patient and caregiver in achieving the overall goals and plan of care. We can use this section to highlight the shared decision making between you and the patient regarding the plan for the next visit.
Example:
- Plan for next visit: patient’s goal – to perform tub transfers with spouse.
- Clinician will instruct in: hip precautions, seated tub transfer technique through use of simulation and videos. Teach back method.
The SBAR template is an easy-to-remember technique to organize the content of a visit. Regular use of this template can add value to an agency through standardization and shared expectations of documentation. For the individual practitioner, this essential pneumonic reduces documentation to highlight key measurable outcomes, patients’ progress toward goals, skilled services offered, and recommendations for further treatment or cessation of services.
Now it’s your turn! Use the SBAR template below to describe one of your latest home care visits:
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OT practitioners spend lots of time on documentation.
Our notes help us track patient progress, communicate with other healthcare providers, and defend our rationale for our treatment choices.
But, as we all know, charting can take FOREVER—and we might not have as much time as we’d like to do it justice.
We are constantly grappling between wanting to write the perfect OT note—one that succinctly says what we did and why we did it—and finishing our documentation as quickly as possible.
My vision (and I’ll admit, it’s a grand one) is to help you create treatment notes that clearly communicate the skilled OT care you provided—without making you lose your mind in the process.
In this guide, you’ll find:
DO’s and DON’Ts of Writing Occupational Therapy Documentation
We know documentation varies widely from setting to setting, so we are using the universal SOAP (Subjective, Objective, Assessment, Plan) note structure to break down our advice.
Even if you don’t use this exact structure in your notes, your documentation probably has all of these dimensions.
Subjective (S)
DO use the subjective part of the note to open your story
Each note should tell a story about your patient, with the subjective portion setting the stage.
Try to open your note with feedback from the patient on what is and isn’t working about their therapy sessions and home exercise program. For example, you can say any of the following to get your note started:
- “Patient states she was excited about ____.”
- “Patient reports he is frustrated he still can’t do ____.”
- “Patient had a setback this past weekend because ____.”
In sentence one, you’ve already begun to justify why you’re there! If you need some good questions to draw out this kind of feedback from patients, check out Good Questions for OTs to Ask.
DON’T go overboard with unnecessary details
Let’s admit it: we are storytellers, and we like to add details. But, we’ve all seen notes with way too much unnecessary information. Here are a few things you can generally leave out of your notes:
- “Patient was seated in chair on arrival.”
- “Patient let me into her home.”
- “Patient requested that nursing clean his room.”
Details are great, because they help preserve the humanity of our patients. But, it’s really not necessary to waste your precious time typing out statements like these.
Channel your inner English major. If a detail does not contribute to the story you are telling—or, in OT terms, contribute to improving a patient’s function—you probably don’t need to include it 🙂
Objective (O)
DO go into detail about your observations and interventions
The objective section of your evaluation and/or SOAP note is often the longest.
This section should contain objective measurements, observations, and test results. Here are a few examples of what you should include:
- Manual muscle tests (MMTs)
- Range of motion measurements (AAROM, AROM, PROM, etc.)
- Level of independence (CGA, MIN A, etc.)
- Functional reporting measures (DASH screen, etc.)
- Objective measures from assessments related to the diagnosis
For a comprehensive list of objective measurements that you can include in this section, check out our blog post on OT assessments. We compiled over 100 assessments you can use to gather the most helpful data possible.
Assessment (A)
DO show clinical reasoning and expertise
The assessment section of your OT note is what justifies your involvement in this patient’s care.
Here, you’ll synthesize how the patient’s story aligns with the objective measurements you took (and overall observations you made) during this particular treatment session.
Your assessment should answer these questions:
- How does all of this information fit together?
- Where (in your professional opinion) should the patient go from here?
- Where does OT fit into the picture for the patient’s treatment plan?
DON’T skimp on the assessment section
The assessment section is your place to shine! All of your education and experience should drive this one crucial paragraph.
And yet…
We tend to simply write: “Patient tolerated therapy well.” Or we copy and paste a generic sentence like: “Patient continues to require verbal cues and will benefit from continued therapy.”
Lack of pizazz aside, that’s not enough to represent the scope of your education and expertise—nor the degree of high-level thinking required to carry out your treatments.
Instead, consider something like: “Patient’s reported improvements in tolerance to toileting activities demonstrate effectiveness of energy conservation techniques she has learned during OT sessions. Improved range of motion and stability of her right arm confirms that her use of shoulder home exercise plan is improving her ability to use her right upper extremity to gain independence with self care.”
Plan (P)
DON’T get lazy
I once took a CEU course on note-writing that was geared toward PTs.
It felt like most of the hour was spent talking about how important it is to make goals functional. But we OTs already know this; function is our bread and butter.
So, why do many OTs insist on writing things like: “Continue plan of care as tolerated”?
Not only do utilization reviewers hate that type of generic language, but it also robs us of the ability to demonstrate our clinical reasoning and treatment rationale!
DO show proper strategic planning of each patient’s care
This section isn’t rocket science. You don’t have to write a novel. But, you do need to show that you’re thinking ahead and considering how care plans will change as patients progress through treatment.
Consider something like this: “Continue working with patient on toileting while gradually decreasing verbal and tactile cues, which will enable patient to become more confident and independent. Add stability exercises to home exercise program to stabilize patient’s right upper extremity in the new range. Decrease OT frequency from 3x/week to 2x/week as tolerated.”
Short, sweet, and meaningful.
General DO’s and DON’TS for documentation
In every good story, there’s a hero and a guide. In the case of OT notes, your patient is the hero—and you are the guide. To take that metaphor one step further: If the patient is Luke Skywalker, you are Yoda.
I think as therapists, we tend to document only one part of the story.
Some of us focus on the hero’s role: “Patient did such and such.”
Others focus on what we, the guide, accomplish with our skilled interventions: “Therapist downgraded, corrected, provided verbal cues.”
But, a really good note—dare I say, a perfect note—shows how the two interact.
If your patient tells you in the subjective section that they are not progressing as quickly as they would like, what did you, as the therapist, do to upgrade their intervention? Your notes should make it apparent that you and the patient are working together as a team.
Let’s look at a few examples:
- “Patient reported illness over the weekend; thus, activities and exercises were downgraded today. Plan to increase intensity when patient feels fully recovered.”
- “Patient has made good progress toward goals and is eager for more home exercises. Plan to add additional stability work at next visit.”
DO be very careful with abbreviations
While I was creating this blog post, I read every piece of advice I could find on documentation—and I had to chuckle, because there was simply no consensus on abbreviations.
Abbreviations are obviously great for saving time—but they can make our notes cryptic (read: useless) to those outside of our specialty.
In an ideal world, we type the abbreviation and our smartie computer fills in the full word or phrase for us. And, for those of us who use an EMR on Google Chrome, this is exactly what can happen. WebPT, for example, allows this integration.
If you don’t already use keyboard shortcuts, contact your IT department and see if there are any options within your EMR. If you aren’t able to implement these shortcuts, I highly recommend that you request them!
I’ve got an article about OT documentation hacks that delves more into the topics of text expanders and abbreviations!
Okay, after all of that, I bet you’re ready to see an OT evaluation in action. You’re in luck, because I have an example for you below!
OT Documentation Cheat Sheets
One of the first things I did in any new setting was make myself a documentation template/cheat sheet.
During my orientation, I would ask a fellow OT if I could see an example of the notes they were writing. Then I would use their example as I crafted my first notes. When I made a note I was happy with, I would print a copy and keep it on my clipboard.
I think the key here is to make the cheat sheet that is right for you. You may simply want a list of power words to use in your notes. Or, you may want a full-fledged note. It may be electronic or something you print and keep at your desk.
In one setting, I created an eval checklist, made copies of it, and used it to take notes so I always had all of the info handy.
At the end of the day, each setting—and therapist—is different. So, take the time to make the cheat sheet that will be most useful to you.
Here are some examples to get you started:
Example Outpatient Occupational Therapy Evaluation
Okay, we’re getting to the good stuff—full OT note examples.
Below is an example outpatient hand therapy note. I chose to feature this type of note because they tend to be on the longer side, thus allowing me to showcase multiple aspects of note writing.
Name: Phillip Peppercorn
MRN: 555556
DOB: 05/07/1976
Evaluation date: 12/10/18
Diagnoses: G56.01, M19.041
Treatment diagnoses: M62.81, R27, M79.641
Referring physician: Dr. Balsamic
Payer: Anthem
Visits used this year: 0
Frequency: 1x/week
Subjective
Patient is a right-handed male software engineer who states he had a severe increase in pain and tingling in his right hand, which led to right carpal tunnel release surgery on 11/30/18. He presents to OT with complaints of pain and residual stiffness while performing typing movements, stating, “I’m supposed to go back to work in three weeks, and I don’t know how I will be able to function with this pain.”
Post surgery, patient complains of 2/10 pain at rest and 7/10 shooting pain at palmar region extending to second and third digits of right hand when working at his computer for extended periods of time and when doing basic household chores that involve carrying heavy objects (like laundry and groceries). The numbness and tingling he was feeling prior to surgery has resolved dramatically.
Past medical/surgical history: anemia, diabetes, right open carpal tunnel release surgery on 11/30/18
Hand dominance: right dominant
IADLs: independent, reports difficulty typing on phone and laptop, and with opening and closing his laptop computer since surgery
ADLs: opening drawers at work, opening door handles at office building
Living environment: lives alone in single-level apartment
Prior level of functioning: independent in work duties, activities of daily living, and instrumental activities of daily living.
Occupational function: works a job as a software engineer; begins light-duty work with no typing on 12/20, MD cleared for 4 initial weeks
Objective
Range of motion and strength:
Left upper extremity: Range of motion within functional limits at all joints and on all planes.
Right upper extremity: Right shoulder, elbow, forearm, digit range of motion all within normal limits on all planes.
Right wrist:
Flexion/extension—Strength: 4/5, AROM: 50/50, PROM: 60/60
Radial/ulnar deviation—Strength: 4/5, AROM: WNL, PROM: NT
Standardized assessments:
Dynamometer
Left hand: 65/60/70
Right hand: 45/40/40
Boston Carpal Tunnel Outcomes Questionnaire (BCTOQ)
Symptom Score = 2.7
Functional Score = 2.4
Sutures were removed and wound is healing well with some edema, surgical glue, and scabbing remaining.
Patient was provided education regarding ergonomic setup at work and home, along with home exercise program, including active digital flexor tendon gliding, wrist flexion and extension active range of motion, active thumb opposition, active isolated flexor pollicis longus glide, and passive wrist extension for completion 4-6x/day each day at 5-10 repetitions.
He was able to verbally repeat the home exercise program and demonstrate for therapist, and was given handout.
Patient was given verbal and written instruction in scar management techniques and scar mobilization massage (3x/day for 3-5 minutes). He was also issued a scar pad to be worn overnight, along with a tubular compression sleeve.
Assessment
Mr. Peppercorn is a 46-year-old male who presents with decreased right grip strength and range of motion, as well as persistent pain, following carpal tunnel release surgery. These deficits have a negative impact on his ability to write, type, and open his laptop and door handles. Anticipate patient may progress more slowly due to diabetes in initial weeks, but BCTOQ reflects that the patient is not progressing as quickly as normal, and is at risk of falling into projected 10-30% of patients who do not have positive outcomes following carpal tunnel release. Patient will benefit from skilled OT to address these deficits, adhere to post-op treatment protocol, and return to work on light duty for initial four weeks.
Plan of care
Recommend skilled OT services 1x/week consisting of therapeutic exercises, therapeutic activities, ultrasound, phonophoresis, e-stim, hot/cold therapy, and manual techniques. Services will address deficits in the areas of grip strength and range of motion, as well as right hand pain. Plan of care will address patient’s difficulty with writing, typing, and opening and closing his laptop and door handles.
Short Term Goals (2 weeks)
- Patient will increase dynamometer score in bilateral hands to 75 lb in order to do laundry.
- Patient will increase right digit strength to 3+/5 in order to open door handles without using left hand for support.
Long Term Goals (6 weeks)
- Patient will increase right wrist strength to 5/5 to carry groceries into his apartment.
- Patent will increase active range of motion in wrist to within normal limits in order to open and close his laptop and use door handles without increased pain.
- Patient will increase dynamometer score in bilateral hands to 90 lb in order to return to recreational activities.
- Patient’s Boston Carpal Tunnel Outcomes Questionnaire score will decrease to less than 1.7 on symptoms and function to return to work and social activities without restrictions.
Signed,
O. Therapist, OTR/L
97165 – occupational therapy evaluation – 1 unit
97530 – therapeutic activities – 1 unit (15 min)
97110 – therapeutic exercises – 2 unit (30 min)
OT Documentation Examples in the OT Potential Club
In the OT Potential Club, our OT evidence-based practice club, you can also access our library of documentation examples.
These are real-life documentation examples. Every setting and facility is different, so they are not intended to be copied for your own use. Rather, they are designed to be discussion-starters that help us improve our documentation skills.
Here’s the examples we have so far:
Acute Care—Adults & Pediatric
- Acute Care OT Eval (s/p THA)
- Acute Care OT Tx Note (s/p THA)
- Acute Pediatric OT Eval (diagnosis: acute myeloid leukemia)
- Acute Pediatric Tx Note (diagnosis: acute myeloid leukemia)
- Inpatient Rehabilitation Eval (diagnosis: ischemic stroke)
Assisted Living Facilities (ALF)
- ALF OT Eval (s/p fall)
- ALF Treatment Note (s/p fall)
Early Intervention (EI)
- EI Eval (diagnosis: Down’s Syndrome)
- EI Tx Note (diagnosis: Down’s Syndrome)
- Telehealth EI Development Eval
Home Health
- Home Health OT Eval (s/p femur fx)
Outpatient (OP)—Adults & Pediatric
- Home-visit Treatment Note (Showcasing caregiver support)
- OP Eval (diagnosis: POTS)
- OP OT Eval (diagnosis: carpal tunnel release)
- OP OT Eval (s/p concussion)
- OP Pediatric Eval (diagnosis: autism, ADHD)
- OP Pediatric OT Eval (diagnosis: autism)
- OP Tx Note (diagnosis: Multiple Sclerosis, participatory medicine tx approach)
- OT Treatment Note (s/p concussion)
- OP Tx Note (diagnosis: post-stroke, self-management tx approach)
- Power Wheelchair Evaluation
- Power Wheelchair Treatment Note
- Pediatric Telehealth Eval—Private Pay
- Pediatric Telehealth Tx Note—Private Pay
Mental Health
- OT Inpatient Psych Eval (adolescent with suicidal ideation)
- OT Inpatient Psych Treatment Notes (adolescent with suicidal ideation)
School-based OT
- School-based OT Eval Report: (diagnosis: autism)
- School OT Eval (diagnosis: Down’s Syndrome)
- Telehealth School OT Eval Example (diagnosis: trisomy 21)
- Telehealth School OT Tx Note (diagnosis: trisomy 21)
Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF)
- SNF OT Eval (s/p THA)
- SNF OT Tx Note (s/p THA)
Conclusion
Documentation can get a bad rap, but I believe OT practitioners are uniquely poised to write notes that are meaningful to other healthcare practitioners and patients alike.
It seems inevitable that our patients will gain easier access to their notes over the next decade, and when they do, I want our documentation to stand out as relevant and useful.
More resources for improving your documentation
I recognize that defensible documentation is an ever-evolving art and science, and I have come across several useful resources that will help you keep your notes complete, yet concise. I highly recommend the following:
Special Thanks
Thank you to The Note Ninjas, Brittany Ferri (an OT clinical reviewer), and Hoangyen Tran (a CHT) for helping me create this resource!
See how the OT Potential Club can elevate your OT
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1st Week: We start with a journal article review based on influential new research.
2nd Week: We interview an expert guest for our AOTA-approved CEU podcast course based on the new research we reviewed in the prior week.
And then we repeat the schedule!
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