Creates structured MSE documentation covering appearance, behavior, speech, mood, thought, cognition, and insight. Use when documenting mental status, writing MSE sections, or describing psychiatric findings.
Creates structured MSE documentation covering appearance, behavior, speech, mood, thought process, thought content, perception, cognition, insight, and judgment in compliance with clinical documentation standards.
The Mental Status Examination (MSE) is the psychiatric equivalent of the physical exam — it is the objective, systematic assessment of a patient's psychological functioning at a specific point in time. Incomplete or formulaic MSE documentation (e.g., "MSE within normal limits") is the most frequently cited deficiency in psychiatric chart audits. CMS, The Joint Commission, and state licensing boards require that MSE findings be documented with sufficient specificity to support the diagnostic formulation, risk assessment, and treatment plan.
In malpractice litigation, the MSE often becomes the focal point of expert review. A well-documented MSE demonstrates that the clinician performed a thorough assessment; a cursory or templated MSE suggests the evaluation was superficial. Clinically, serial MSE documentation enables tracking of treatment response, detection of emerging side effects (e.g., tardive dyskinesia, cognitive dulling), and identification of acute changes requiring intervention.
Document what is directly observed, not inferred:
Appearance:
Psychomotor Activity:
Behavior and Engagement:
Document speech characteristics as distinct from thought content:
Note: Pressured speech with flight of ideas suggests mania. Poverty of speech with increased latency suggests depression or negative symptoms. Disorganized speech patterns should be documented under Thought Process.
Mood (subjective — patient's self-reported emotional state):
Affect (objective — clinician's observation):
Thought Process (how the patient thinks — the form of thought):
Thought Content (what the patient thinks about):
Document the following at minimum:
If formal cognitive screening is warranted, administer and document:
Insight (understanding of illness):
Judgment (decision-making capacity in daily life):
Document specific examples supporting the insight and judgment assessment rather than using labels alone.