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No, a superbill is not part of the patient medical record. It is a document used for billing purposes to detail the services provided to the patient.
abbas
The discharge summary
An encounter form is a document or record used to collect data about given elements of a patient visit to a dental office or similar site that can become part of a patient record or be used for management purposes or for quality review activities.
Administrative expenses are part of income statement and shown there and not in balance sheet.
No Madagascar is classified as a part of Africa.
Aberystwyth is part of the county of Ceredigion.
Yes it is part of administrative expneses because most of stationary is utilized in administration department.
protista
Doctors and hospitals own the patients entire medical records. Patients can have access to their medical records through electronic means via a computer to the relevant diagnostic tests and diagnosis. A patient can also request certain aspects of their medical records in paper form for a fee.
Some parts of the medical record can be shared automatically with insurance companies for billing purposes. The patient's name, birth date, hospital record number, date of admission and discharge, diagnoses or diagnostic codes, comprise the basics of what is shared for insurance purposes. However, even a "next of kin" has limited access to a patient's medical records. Cases of child abuse or suspected criminal activity (attempted poisoning of a patient), criminal acts by a caregiver, or communicable diseases that could affect a community often mean that patient medical records or information is shared, in part or in whole, to authorities.
Some parts of the medical record can be shared automatically with insurance companies for billing purposes. The patient's name, birth date, hospital record number, date of admission and discharge, diagnoses or diagnostic codes, comprise the basics of what is shared for insurance purposes. However, even a "next of kin" has limited access to a patient's medical records. Cases of child abuse or suspected criminal activity (attempted poisoning of a patient), criminal acts by a caregiver, or communicable diseases that could affect a community often mean that patient medical records or information is shared, in part or in whole, to authorities.