Robin Rossiter of Medical Records
Caring for the Details
In a hospice and palliative care company, the medical records department is central to the day-to-day operations of delivering end-of-life care but also to the core business and financing of the delivery of that care.
Robin Rossiter of Crossroads in Northeast Ohio is a model of medical records responsibility and perfecting the art of the detail.
It was at the Veterans Administration where she worked for more than 20 years that Robin learned the ropes as a medical records clerk. Now she has been with Crossroads for more than seven years.
“Every detail is so important,” Robin explained, in an environment where “things change constantly.” At Crossroads each medical records clerk supports two clinical teams of 50 patients each.
While the number fluctuates, when Robin was interviewed for this article, she was managing the medical records of 102 patients. “You must be a perfectionist who loves details,” Robin said.
Ready to be Audited by Medicare
According to Amy Keener, RN, BSN, CHPN, Crossroads VP of Clinical Support, Robin exemplifies the high standards she seeks in each site’s medical records team. At the corporate level, Amy leads the team that responds to Medicare audits. She works very closely with all medical records across Crossroads’ locations.
“This is a matter of us (Crossroads) getting paid or not,” Amy put in a nutshell the importance of a top-notch medical records operation. There are two key documents required at the time a patient is admitted.
One is the Medicare Hospice Benefit Election form. The other is a Certificate of Terminal Illness. Non-compliance isn’t an option. The importance of staying on top of these two forms on a daily basis is crucial to success, according to Amy. She said, “It effects payment, which is critical to the delivery of care.”
Because of her proficiency and can-do attitude, Robin is someone Amy has reached out to to train medical records clerks who need extra support at other site locations. “She has travelled on holidays and even on her birthday to train people,” Amy said as an example of Robin’s dedication.
If you ask Robin, it’s no big deal, it’s just the way she’s wired. She said the medical records team doesn’t see patients so it may seem like they lack sentimentality and that they’re all business. Robin sees it a different way. Her passion is in the details and the proper filing of paperwork so Crossroads’ clinical teams can deliver end-of-life care in the best possible way for patients and their families.
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