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J Am Dent Assoc, Vol 135, No 6, 765-766.
© 2004 American Dental Association | ![]() |
CLINICAL DIRECTIONS |
Serving the patient with a dental emergency can be both challenging and rewarding. Much of the challenge comes from incorporating a new spoke into the turning wheel that is the daily schedule. With the unplanned nature of the emergency visit, the dental team must remain diligent in record keeping. This is especially true because in emergency dental care, no treatment plan has yet been established to serve as a blueprint for care.1
We developed an emergency care assessment form to help organize the doctors and staff for effective emergency case management (FigureOur emergency care assessment worksheet allows doctors or staff members to circle or highlight quickly the basic findings of the emergency case.
). We incorporated the well-known SOAP format because it is an excellent assessment toolrecognized universally and easily learned. SOAP is defined as follows:
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An excellent review of the theory of, method of and justification for SOAP record documentation was provided by Weed,1 who initiated the subsequent development of the documentation method.
Our emergency care assessment worksheet allows doctors or staff members to circle or highlight quickly the basic findings of the emergency case. The doctors and staff members write in additional information as applicable. (The form is not intended to be all-inclusive.)
Dentists can use the assessment form for internal gathering and organizing of information. After the disposition of the case, when time allows, the assistant can review the form and record the pertinent details in the permanent record. The dentist then can survey the chart entry for accuracy. The form generally is discarded at that point but may be kept, if appropriate, in the progress notes area.
We have revised our emergency assessment form many times over the years. We print copies of our master document and stock our operatories with them as necessary. The emergency patient assessment form helps us standardize and organize our emergency case management. The results are consistent, detailed chart documentation and, most importantly, improved care for patients with dental emergencies.
DO YOU HAVE A TIP TO SHARE
Do you have a time- or work-saving clinical technique to share with your colleagues? Submit it to JADAs Clinical Directions department. A Clinical Directions item should be a maximum of two double-spaced typed pages and should include no more than one figure or illustration. Submit five copies of your manuscript and of each illustration to Clinical Directions, The Journal of the American Dental Association, Editorial Office, University of Pennsylvania, School of Dental Medicine, The Robert Schattner Center, 240 S. 40th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 19104-6030.
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
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