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Treatment Plan Quality Assurance Checklist

Overview

Use this checklist to ensure treatment plans meet professional standards for completeness, quality, safety, and regulatory compliance. Review each section before finalizing the plan.


Section 1: Completeness - Required Components

☐ Patient Information

  • Patient identifier (de-identified if sharing)
  • Age range (not exact date of birth)
  • Sex and relevant demographics
  • Date of plan creation
  • Provider name and credentials
  • Facility/practice name
  • HIPAA de-identification notice included

☐ Diagnosis and Assessment

  • Primary diagnosis clearly stated
  • ICD-10 code(s) included
  • Secondary diagnoses and comorbidities listed
  • Disease severity/staging documented
  • Baseline functional status assessed
  • Risk stratification performed (if applicable)

☐ Treatment Goals

  • Short-term goals present (1-3 months)
  • Long-term goals present (6-12 months)
  • Goals meet SMART criteria (see Section 2)
  • Patient-centered goals included
  • Goals are prioritized or organized

☐ Interventions

  • Pharmacological interventions specified
  • Non-pharmacological interventions included
  • Procedural interventions or referrals noted
  • Each intervention has clear rationale
  • Evidence-based or guideline-concordant

☐ Timeline and Schedule

  • Treatment phases with durations defined
  • Appointment frequency specified
  • Milestone assessments scheduled
  • Expected total treatment duration stated

☐ Monitoring Parameters

  • Clinical outcomes to track identified
  • Baseline values documented
  • Target values specified
  • Monitoring frequency defined
  • Assessment tools/scales named

☐ Expected Outcomes

  • Primary outcome measures stated
  • Success criteria defined
  • Timeline for improvement indicated
  • Criteria for treatment modification noted

☐ Follow-up Plan

  • Next appointment scheduled
  • Follow-up frequency specified
  • Communication plan outlined
  • Emergency contact procedures included

☐ Patient Education

  • Condition education documented
  • Self-management skills training noted
  • Warning signs communicated
  • Resources and support listed

☐ Risk Mitigation and Safety

  • Potential adverse effects identified
  • Safety monitoring plan included
  • Emergency procedures outlined
  • Complication prevention addressed

☐ Signature and Date

  • Provider signature line
  • Provider name and credentials
  • Date of plan
  • Patient acknowledgment (if applicable)

Section 2: SMART Goals Quality

For each treatment goal, verify it meets SMART criteria:

☐ Specific

  • Goal clearly defines what will be accomplished
  • No vague language (e.g., "improve", "better")
  • Specific outcome stated

Example: "Reduce HbA1c from 8.5% to <7%" ✓
Not: "Improve diabetes control" ✗

☐ Measurable

  • Quantifiable metric or observable criterion included
  • Baseline value documented
  • Target value specified

Example: "Walk 300 feet with walker independently" ✓
Not: "Walk further" ✗

☐ Achievable

  • Realistic given patient's condition and capabilities
  • Resources available to support goal
  • Timeframe is reasonable
  • Treatment efficacy supports goal

Example: "Reduce pain from 7/10 to 4/10 in 6 weeks" ✓
Not: "Eliminate all pain in 1 week" ✗

☐ Relevant

  • Aligned with patient values and priorities
  • Clinically meaningful
  • Addresses patient's functional limitations
  • Integrated with overall treatment objectives

Example: "Return to work with modifications within 3 months" ✓
Not: "Lab value improvement" (if patient doesn't care about it) ✗

☐ Time-bound

  • Specific deadline or timeframe stated
  • Reassessment interval defined
  • Action frequency specified (if applicable)

Example: "Within 8 weeks" or "By month 3" ✓
Not: "Eventually" or "Soon" ✗


Section 3: Clinical Quality

☐ Evidence-Based Practice

  • Interventions based on current evidence
  • Clinical practice guidelines followed
  • Guideline deviations explained and justified
  • Literature or evidence cited (if formal plan)

☐ Medication Documentation (if applicable)

  • Generic drug names used
  • Specific dose, route, frequency documented
  • Indication/rationale provided for each medication
  • Adverse effects to monitor noted
  • Drug interactions considered
  • Titration plan included if applicable

☐ Assessment Tools

  • Validated assessment tools used when available
  • Tools appropriate for condition (PHQ-9, FIM, Berg, etc.)
  • Baseline scores documented
  • Target scores specified
  • Reassessment schedule defined

☐ Multidisciplinary Coordination (if applicable)

  • Roles of team members defined
  • Communication plan among providers specified
  • Care transitions addressed
  • Specialist recommendations integrated

☐ Preventive Care Integration

  • Age-appropriate screening included
  • Vaccination schedule noted
  • Lifestyle counseling documented
  • Health maintenance addressed

Section 4: Patient-Centered Care

☐ Shared Decision-Making

  • Patient preferences documented
  • Treatment options discussed
  • Risks and benefits explained
  • Patient values incorporated into goals
  • Alternative treatments considered

☐ Health Literacy

  • Language appropriate for patient understanding
  • Medical jargon explained or avoided
  • Teach-back method used or planned
  • Written materials at appropriate reading level

☐ Cultural Competence

  • Cultural beliefs and practices considered
  • Language barriers addressed (interpreter if needed)
  • Cultural adaptations made when appropriate
  • Religious/spiritual preferences respected

☐ Social Determinants of Health

  • Social needs screened (food, housing, transportation)
  • Barriers to care identified
  • Community resources provided
  • Financial concerns addressed (medication costs, etc.)

☐ Patient Engagement

  • Patient actively involved in goal-setting
  • Self-management support provided
  • Patient education tailored to individual
  • Follow-up preferences considered

Section 5: Safety and Risk Management

☐ Medication Safety

  • Allergy history documented
  • Polypharmacy reviewed (deprescribing considered)
  • High-risk medications monitored appropriately
  • Drug-drug interactions checked
  • Renal/hepatic dosing adjustments made if needed

☐ Fall Prevention (if relevant)

  • Fall risk assessed
  • Fall prevention strategies included
  • Environmental modifications recommended
  • Assistive devices prescribed

☐ Infection Prevention (if relevant)

  • Immunizations up to date
  • Prophylactic antibiotics if indicated
  • Infection signs and symptoms patient education

☐ Emergency Preparedness

  • Emergency warning signs clearly listed
  • When to call 911 specified
  • When to call provider defined
  • Emergency contact numbers provided

☐ Suicide/Violence Risk (mental health plans)

  • Risk assessment documented
  • Safety plan created if ideation present
  • Means restriction addressed
  • Crisis resources provided (988 lifeline)
  • Follow-up frequency appropriate for risk level

☐ Opioid Safety (pain management plans)

  • Opioid risk assessment completed (ORT, SOAPP)
  • Informed consent discussion documented
  • Treatment agreement signed
  • PDMP checked
  • Naloxone co-prescribed
  • UDS plan included

Section 6: Regulatory Compliance

☐ HIPAA Compliance

  • Protected health information (PHI) safeguarded
  • De-identification per Safe Harbor method (if sharing)
  • All 18 HIPAA identifiers removed (if de-identified)
  • Minimum necessary principle followed
  • Consent discussion documented
  • Patient understanding verified
  • Risks and benefits explained
  • Alternative treatments discussed
  • Patient agreement documented

☐ Medical Necessity

  • Treatment medically necessary for diagnosis
  • Interventions appropriate for severity
  • Evidence supports treatment choices
  • Frequency and duration justified

☐ Billing and Coding

  • ICD-10 diagnosis codes included
  • CPT procedure codes (if procedures planned)
  • Documentation supports billing level
  • Medical necessity for services demonstrated

☐ Quality Measure Support

  • Elements support quality reporting (HEDIS, MIPS)
  • Chronic disease management protocols followed
  • Preventive care documented
  • Patient safety indicators addressed

☐ Specialty-Specific Regulations

  • 42 CFR Part 2 compliance (if substance use disorder treatment)
  • CDC opioid guidelines followed (if opioid prescription)
  • Joint Commission standards met (if applicable)
  • State-specific requirements addressed

Section 7: Documentation Standards

☐ Clarity and Precision

  • Professional medical terminology used appropriately
  • Abbreviations defined on first use
  • No ambiguous language
  • Specific rather than vague descriptions

☐ Accuracy

  • Factually correct information
  • Current evidence-based recommendations
  • Correct medication dosing and frequencies
  • Proper ICD-10 and CPT coding

☐ Organization

  • Logical flow and structure
  • Consistent formatting
  • Easy to locate key information
  • Headings and sections clearly labeled

☐ Legibility (if handwritten or hybrid)

  • Handwriting legible
  • No unclear abbreviations
  • Typed portions clear
  • Signatures legible with printed name

☐ Authentication

  • Provider name clearly stated
  • Credentials included
  • Date of plan present
  • Signature obtained (electronic or handwritten)

Section 8: Special Considerations by Plan Type

For General Medical Plans:

  • Chronic disease management protocols followed
  • Guideline-based targets used (HbA1c, BP, lipids)
  • Medication regimen optimized
  • Comorbidities addressed
  • Preventive care integrated

For Rehabilitation Plans:

  • Functional assessments with validated tools (FIM, Berg)
  • Impairment, activity, and participation goals included
  • Therapy frequency and duration specified
  • Home exercise program documented
  • DME and environmental modifications listed
  • Discharge criteria defined

For Mental Health Plans:

  • DSM-5 diagnostic criteria met
  • Symptom severity assessed (PHQ-9, GAD-7, etc.)
  • Suicide/violence risk assessed
  • Safety plan created (if indicated)
  • Evidence-based psychotherapy specified
  • Medication trials and responses documented
  • Functional and recovery-oriented goals included

For Chronic Disease Management Plans:

  • All active conditions prioritized
  • Medication synergies identified
  • Polypharmacy addressed
  • Care coordination plan clear
  • Registry/population health integration noted
  • Transition management included

For Perioperative Plans:

  • Preoperative risk assessment (RCRI, ASA, Caprini)
  • Medical optimization documented
  • ERAS elements included (if applicable)
  • Postoperative milestones defined
  • Discharge criteria specified
  • VTE prophylaxis plan included

For Pain Management Plans:

  • Comprehensive pain assessment (location, quality, intensity, impact)
  • Pain type classified (nociceptive, neuropathic, nociplastic)
  • Multimodal analgesia approach
  • Opioid risk assessment (if opioids considered)
  • Functional goals emphasized (not just pain scores)
  • Psychological screening and intervention included
  • CDC opioid guidelines followed (if prescribing)

Section 9: Final Review

☐ Proofreading

  • Spelling and grammar checked
  • No typos or errors
  • Consistent terminology throughout
  • Patient name correct throughout (if not de-identified)

☐ Completeness Verification

  • All placeholder text replaced with patient-specific information
  • All bracketed [fields] customized
  • No "TBD" or "to be completed" items remaining
  • All required sections complete

☐ Quality Assurance

  • Plan reviewed by provider
  • Peer review completed (if applicable)
  • Compliance verification done
  • Automated checks run (if available scripts used)

☐ Patient Review Preparation

  • Patient-friendly summary prepared (if needed)
  • Patient education materials gathered
  • Consent forms ready for signature
  • Questions anticipated and prepared to address

Scoring and Interpretation

Total Items: ~150 (varies by plan type)

Scoring:

  • Count number of checked items
  • Calculate percentage: (Checked / Total) × 100

Interpretation:

  • 95-100%: Excellent - Plan meets highest quality standards
  • 85-94%: Good - Plan is high quality with minor gaps
  • 70-84%: Acceptable - Plan is adequate but has areas needing improvement
  • <70%: Needs Improvement - Significant gaps in quality or compliance

Critical Items (Must Have):

The following items are critical and must be present:

  • ✓ Patient identifier and de-identification notice
  • ✓ Primary diagnosis with ICD-10 code
  • ✓ At least 3 SMART goals
  • ✓ Interventions with rationales
  • ✓ Monitoring plan
  • ✓ Follow-up plan
  • ✓ Patient education
  • ✓ Safety/risk mitigation
  • ✓ Emergency procedures
  • ✓ Provider signature

If any critical item is missing, plan should not be finalized until corrected.


Usage Instructions

  1. Review each section systematically
  2. Check boxes as criteria are met
  3. Note deficiencies for correction
  4. Calculate score to assess overall quality
  5. Address gaps before finalizing
  6. Document review with reviewer name and date

Reviewer: ______________________________

Date Reviewed: ____________________

Score: _____% (____ items checked / ____ total items)

Status:

  • Approved for use
  • Approved with minor revisions
  • Requires significant revision
  • Not approved

Comments/Recommendations:

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________


Document Version: 1.0
Last Updated: January 2025
Next Review: Annually or with guideline updates