A clinician documents for the 85 year old patient as alert and oriented ×4 despite a history of advanced age and progressive dementia. The documentation does not reflect the patient’s known cognitive impairment, raising concerns regarding the accuracy of the comprehensive assessment and the appropriateness of the resulting plan of care.
Inaccurate cognitive documentation may underestimate the patient’s need for supervision, caregiver assistance, and skilled interventions, increasing the risk of medication mismanagement, poor safety awareness, falls, and hospitalization.
Cognitive impairment influences OASIS scoring, risk adjustment, and case-mix assignment under PDGM. Failure to accurately document dementia may result in an inaccurate representation of patient acuity and potentially inappropriate reimbursement.
Underreporting cognitive deficits may lead to insufficient visit utilization and omission of necessary skilled services such as nursing education, therapy, and caregiver training, which can negatively affect outcomes and increase the likelihood of avoidable acute care utilization.
CMS Conditions of Participation require that the comprehensive assessment accurately identify all physical, cognitive, and psychosocial needs and that the plan of care include all appropriate services.
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© Copyright 2025 Bharari Digital Solutions (BDS). All Rights Reserved
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