Creates structured surgical consultation responses with assessment and surgical candidacy determination. Use when responding to surgical consults, evaluating surgical candidates, or documenting surgical recommendations.
Creates structured surgical consultation responses with assessment and surgical candidacy determination.
Surgical consultation notes serve as both the clinical assessment that determines whether a patient proceeds to surgery and the medicolegal document that establishes the surgeon's decision-making process. The consultation note must clearly answer the referring provider's question, document the risk-benefit analysis, establish that informed consent elements were discussed, and communicate a clear plan. CMS documentation guidelines require that consultations include the reason for referral, a complete assessment, and a clearly stated opinion — without these elements the consultation cannot be billed as such and may default to a lower-paying E/M level.
Poor consultation notes lead to miscommunication between services, patients proceeding to surgery without adequate risk stratification, and medicolegal exposure when preoperative decision-making is not documented. This skill ensures every surgical consultation note answers the clinical question, documents the assessment thoroughly, and communicates a clear disposition.
Structure the header:
SURGICAL CONSULTATION NOTE
Date/Time:
Requesting Service:
Requesting Provider:
Reason for Consultation: [Quote the actual consult question]
Urgency: Emergent / Urgent / Elective
Restate the consultation question verbatim from the order, then expand with clinical context. Example: "General surgery consulted by Dr. Martinez, Internal Medicine, for evaluation of a 67-year-old male with CT evidence of acute cholecystitis and assessment for surgical candidacy."
For each study, document:
Highlight abnormalities affecting surgical candidacy:
Apply and document:
Write a structured assessment addressing:
Example: "This is a 67-year-old male, ASA III, with acute cholecystitis confirmed by CT imaging. He is a reasonable surgical candidate. ACS NSQIP predicts 4.2% serious complication risk and 0.8% mortality. I recommend laparoscopic cholecystectomy during this admission. Risks, benefits, and alternatives were discussed; the patient understands and wishes to proceed."
Structure the plan:
Communicate the recommendation to the referring provider (document: "discussed with Dr. Martinez, medicine attending, who agrees with the plan").