S = Source
O = Oriented
M = Medical
R = Record
A format of using Source approach
example
Radiology Report
Laboratory Report
Surigical Report
tocodynamometer
Consist of a chronological set of notes for each visit beginning with patients first's visit.(SOMR)
I'm guessing you might mean your medical records? Your insurance records would be wherever you put them. Your medical records, or records of insurance payments would be with the medical provider.
SOMR (Source-Oriented Medical Record) organizes patient information by different sources of data, such as lab results, medications, and nursing notes, making it easier to track specific disciplines. In contrast, POMR (Problem-Oriented Medical Record) structures information around the patient's problems, facilitating a comprehensive approach to diagnosis and treatment by focusing on individual issues and their management. The POMR method encourages a more holistic view of patient care, while SOMR is more fragmented and source-specific.
In a POMR or problem oriented medical record, the record is kept together by problem number (a number is assigned to each problem. Progress notes in these records are kept in SOAP format. S=subjective (chief complaint, present illness), O=objective (physical exam, labs), A=assessment (diagnosis, prognosis), P=plan (treatment). In a SOMR or source oriented medical record, the record is kept together by subject matter (labs are all together, progress notes are all together). Progress notes in a SOMR are written in paragraph format.
Joan Richards has written: 'Medical Charting Demystified' -- subject(s): Medical records, Medical Records, Forms and Records Control, Computerized Medical Records Systems, OverDrive, Medical, Nonfiction
EMR
when is national medical records day
if they are your own medical records you cannot be refused them. you have the right to have a copy of your medical records. it is against the law for anyone not to give you your medical records
Josef Somr was born on April 15, 1934, in Vracov, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic].
medical records for Melbourne in the 1950s
No