
The system does not alert you when a supply runs below its set reorder pointi. There is a Supply Inventory Report that can be run to show this information.
When a custom field is set up there are several data types you can choose to decide what type of information is available in each field. If that field was set up with a data type of “number” then only numbers, and no other characters, like parenthesis or dashes are allowed. An alternative to using the data type of “number” is to use the data type of “text”. Using “text” allows you to enter numbers, letters and characters.
Another key point to remember is that custom fields using a data type of whole number or decimal, will have the options for sum, average, min, and max in the Report Wizard. Custom fields using text as the data type will not have options for those mathmatical operators.
At this time, you are unable to hide your Custom tabs by program use.
The custom tabs for physician are only available in the Set Up menu when you are working with a Physician. The custom tabs for physician are intended for very specific internal-agency use, and not for use at the client level.
You have the option of inactivating a custom tab. When inactivated, the custom tab will no longer display for users. If you really need to delete a customer tab you need to first delete any fields created for that tab. If any data has been entered in a field, that field can not be deleted and therefore the associated Custom tab can not be deleted. If no data was entered on any activity or client records for any fields on that custom tab, then the delete icon displays next to each field. Delete each field, and only then can you delete the tab.
Before you can delete a Custom tab, you need to delete any fields created for that tab. If any data has been entered in a field, that field can not be deleted and therefore the associated Custom tab can not be deleted.
If your Custom tab cannot be deleted, you can make that Custom tab inactive by unchecking the active click box. This will make that Custom tab inactive and would not be available to your users. Inactive Custom tabs do not count towards the allowed 10 Custom tabs per section.
Fields that are on the Custom Field tabs may be inactivated or deleted by users with Supervisor privileges to the Set Up options. Other fields, that are standard, built in fields in Nightingale Notes can not be deleted. You may want to add and train on procedures with your employees to help them learn which fields not to use.
Yes, absolutely. There is no limit on the number of fields you can put on a custom tab. It is important to remember when designing your custom tabs that the more fields you put on a single tab, the more scrolling you will have to do to see the fields at the bottom.
In order for the Growth Chart report to display in the Activity List Reportsi - on - Demand list the following are required:
1. The child must have its own Client record - its own admission.
2. The Born oni Date in Client Details/Name and Address Tab has to be filled in AND the date has to be within the last 5 years.
3. The child must have a Gender filled in on the Client Details/Demographics Tab. At this point the report is available in the Activity List Reports - On-Demand. In order for any data to display on the report, at least one activity has to have at least one of the Child Vitals for Length, Weight, or Head Circumference filled in.
A. Copy activity is only available if charting exists for an activity.
A. Ledger entries can not be removed. Enter a reverse entry to correct the ledger balance.
If a payment has been posted to the ledger for that claim it can no longer be deleted.
Check to see if the activity is locked. If it is, a supervisor can unlock it. Or if the activity has been included in a billing cycle the activity cannot be edited. The claim needs to be deleted in order for the activity to be edited.
No. You need to enter the time for each service as a separate activity.
No. You need to create a separate activity each time the cost centeri changes.
Yes, the client search does search Aliases. If the client’s last name changes from 'Smith' to 'Jones', that client listed in the search as 'Jones'.
When a chart is unlocked, it remains unlocked until midnight.
If the client is assigned to a program on the Client Admission tab and you are not also assigned to at least one of the programs the client has, you will not be able to see them in your client list. A supervisor needs to assign you to programs using the Set Up options.
Nightingale Notes uses a nationally recognized address database to automatically populate the correct city and state when you enter the zip code. You only have to enter one field, the zip code, rather than all three fields.
If the client is assigned to a program on the Client Admission tab and you are not also assigned to at least one of the programs the client has, you will not be able to see them in your client list. A supervisor needs to assign you to programs using the Set Up options.
Charts are automatically locked 7 days after the activity date.
Different agencies have different approaches to creating a family chart:
The office identifies where the agency serving the client is located. For example, if your agency serves 3 cities and has one office in each city, then the Office could be identified by the city name. The location identifies where the services are performed for the client. For example, if you visit them in their home, or at a nursing home. Those are locations.
Nightingale Notes allows agencies and clinicians a variety of options to record tests administered (e.g. Denver II), forms completed (e.g. agency nutrition questionnaire), pamphlets handed out (e.g., SIDS prevention), and similar items:
Unlimited diagnosis codes may be entered on the Client Admission tab. The first diagnosis entered is the primary. All subsequent diagnoses are considered as secondary. Even though Nightingale Notes allows you to enter an unlimited number of diagnoses, the electronic claim file can only use the first 8.
Whether a chart is locked manually or automatically, only a person with Supervisor privileges to Activities can unlock a chart.
No. An Actual problem may not necessarily be a high priority one for you to follow—perhaps the client is taking care of it himself or another provider is working on it.
You may also find that a Potential Problem (e.g., a teen mother with many risk factors for poor parenting) may be the highest priority problem that your client has.
Don’t over-identify problems—more is not necessarily better! Some areas of concern can be addressed as targets under more-inclusive “umbrella” problems such as Pregnancy, Postpartum, Caretaking/parenting, Growth and development, etc. (If needed, go back to the slides covering targets to see a good example of this) You need to be VERY FAMILIAR with the target list to do this well.
Don’t under-identify problems, either. If the client has very discrete, un-related problems, they shouldn’t be combined under one problem label as it will be difficult or impossible for you to accurately measure outcomes.
BONUS! When you start charting in Champ, you will be using pathways that pre-load problems and interventions for different client types. Depending on your client, you may need to delete or add problem or interventions to fit your client’s unique needs and characteristics.
Often the best way to decide which problem(s) to choose is to look at the signs/symptoms listed for each problem you are considering:
For example, a client with a colostomy may have inflammation of the skin surrounding the stoma. This is really a Skin problem, not a Bowel function problem—the signs and symptoms for Skin fit what you are describing and what you are taking action on.
Once you have charted on a problem you may not delete that problem. You first have remove all charting including any intervention notes and problem details. Only then can you delete the problem entirely.
To remove a pathway you first need to remove all documentation from the problems and interventions for that pathway.
In simple terms, an Actual problem is one for which the client is currently displaying signs/symptoms. A Potential problem is one for which the client has risk factors, but currently does not have any signs or symptoms. A Health Promotion problem is one for which the client has neither actual signs/symptoms or risk factors, but education is appropriate or requested (example: a client asks for information about exercise classes available in his community).
The User Guide’s sample care plans give only one possible example of KBS ratings, care plans, etc. for each problem. Your client may or may not match up exactly—that’s fine, just choose what may fit for your client and discard what does not.
Most public health field programs use this category infrequently, if at all.. It is designed for documenting hands-on care such as catheter changing, insertion of an IV, specimen collection, etc. However, if you do actually perform a hands-on procedure such as giving a PPD in the home, it may be used.
If your client is an infant, child, or dependent adult, the Knowledge and Behavior ratings will refer to the caretaker. The Status rating will refer to your client. You can indicate the caretaker’s name in your notes so that anyone reading your chart will know who you rated.
Not necessarily. Let's face it—many of our clients are low income when we find them and they're low income when we leave them--that's not something you can usually do something about. What we usually can do as practitioners is to help families with some of the common effects of being low income--lack of access to health care, poor nutrition, etc. Those may be the issues to focus on, not income itself. In other words, if the PHN/clinician goes out and makes referrals to nutrition or health care programs for low-income clients, then she's more directly impacting poor nutrition and health care access problems, not income. But if you are referring a client to AFDC, consumer credit counselors, budget management classes, food stamps, etc., then those would be appropriate to follow under Income.
Your charting is a SNAPSHOT of what you assessed and did on that day, not what you may do in the future. In your charting you may include plans to assess/discuss certain issues later, but these possible areas shouldn’t be identified as problems in your care plan yet.
If you want to use an existing care plan created by another clinician, simply select the last activity for which that care plan was used on the client’s Activity list [which can be accessed by clicking on the Activities icon next to the client’s name on the Clients (Search) screen].
Closing a client to services in Nightingale Notes is an easy process:
In order to protect client data and be HIPAA compliant, Nightingale Notes will not allow your browser to save your username and password.
Check the following items:
Please check the following items:
"Nightingale Notes is awesome! The nurses "Love It!" This is the first computer program they have done
besides Outlook. By the end of the first month I kept hearing how they love it. They are even pushing
now to get laptops so they can take them in the homes. The time savings and accuracy has already
started. I cannot think of anything that would even make me question doing this again."
Happiest User Ever!
Pam Stevenson
Acct. Tech., Becker County Community Health
"One of our favorite aspects of Nightingale Notes is the fact that we can access the software wherever there
is an internet connection. We love the ability to create custom tabs in NN - a feature we are already using
and plan to use even more in the future"
Nurses from Douglas County, MN
“Bismarck Burleigh Public Health chose Champ because we were looking for an electronic health record which would fit our needs, programsi and work flow; we did not have to adjust our work process into an
offered structure. We wanted the program to be web based so it worked for all of our programs, including
home health and schools. Our staff wanted to get away from duplicate documentation for charting and
billing. We were also looking for a way to collect outcomes, including for community based programs,
and BBPH found the Omaha System and Nightingale Notes is able to meet all of these needs.”
Paula Flanders, Public Health Director for Bismarck-Burleigh
Site Map | Contact Us | Privacy Statement
Copyright © 2011 Champ Software All Rights Reserved
