Structures psychotherapy documentation meeting billing and clinical requirements. Use when documenting therapy sessions, writing progress notes, or recording psychotherapy interventions.
Structures psychotherapy documentation meeting HIPAA protections, billing compliance, clinical continuity requirements, and payer audit standards while maintaining the distinction between progress notes and psychotherapy notes.
Psychotherapy documentation must satisfy competing demands: clinical utility (enabling continuity of care), legal compliance (supporting medical necessity for billing), HIPAA protections (psychotherapy notes receive enhanced privacy protections under 45 CFR 164.508(a)(2)), and malpractice protection (demonstrating standard of care). Many clinicians fail to distinguish between psychotherapy notes (also called "process notes") and progress notes — a critical distinction under HIPAA that determines who can access the documentation and whether patient authorization is required for disclosure.
Payer audits are the primary source of financial risk in behavioral health. CMS, state Medicaid programs, and commercial payers require that progress notes document medical necessity for the service billed, the specific interventions used, the patient's response, and a plan aligned with the treatment plan goals. Inadequate progress notes result in payment recoupment, fraud allegations, and exclusion from payer networks. Conversely, excessive detail in the medical record (which is accessible to other providers, payers, and in legal proceedings) may compromise patient privacy.
S — Subjective:
O — Objective:
A — Assessment:
P — Plan:
Document the specific interventions used, not just the modality label. This is the most common audit deficiency.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT):
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT):
Prolonged Exposure (PE):
Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT):
Motivational Interviewing (MI):
Psychodynamic/Insight-Oriented:
Every progress note MUST include a risk assessment update, even when there are no concerns:
When no acute safety concerns: "Patient denies suicidal ideation, homicidal ideation, and self-harm urges. No evidence of psychotic symptoms. Safety plan remains in place. Risk assessment: low."
When safety concerns are present, document:
Mandatory reporting events:
Document elements required to support medical necessity for the CPT code billed:
For all therapy sessions:
For add-on E/M codes (+90833, +90836, +90838):
Common audit failures to avoid: