Clinical documentation
The record is the memory of care, the basis of billing, and the evidence in a dispute — all at once. Good clinical documentation serves the patient first, and everything else follows.
In one line
Clinical documentation is the recorded account of a patient's care — history, findings, decisions, actions and outcomes. It has to be accurate, timely, complete and specific, because the same note serves clinical continuity, coding and billing, quality measurement, and the legal record.
Structure that makes a note usable
Beyond free text, good documentation is structured where it counts: problem lists, coded diagnoses, medications, allergies and results as discrete data — so the record is searchable, reusable and safe to exchange as FHIR. Narrative explains the why; structure carries the what.
Clinical Documentation Integrity (CDI)
CDI programs work with clinicians to make documentation specific and complete — capturing severity, acuity and the true clinical picture. Accurate specificity drives correct coding and reimbursement, honest quality metrics and safer handoffs. It is not "up-coding"; it is making the record say precisely what was true.
Watch for — note bloat and copy-forward
The EHR made it easy to copy-forward yesterday's note, producing long, cloned documents that hide the day's real change and can propagate errors. Ambient documentation and better templates help, but the discipline is the same: document the patient in front of you, concisely and truthfully.