Abstract
Provider notes serve as a critical component of physician workflow, documenting essential aspects of patient care while also fulfilling regulatory and billing requirements. With increasing documentation complexity introduced by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the 2021 mandate for open access to clinical notes, physicians in training must develop skills to accurately document patient complexity. This quality improvement initiative aimed to enhance inpatient note documentation by internal medicine residents, focusing on improving the capture of medical complexity in coding and billing standards. Our intervention included the development and implementation of a standardized progress note template, a structured scoring rubric, multidisciplinary rounds and curriculum integrating faculty and peer-led feedback. The study measured documentation improvements through rubric scores, Length of Stay Index (LOSi), and complications or comorbidities (CC) and major complications or comorbidities (MCC) capture rates. Results demonstrated improvements in LOSi and enhanced CC/MCC capture, leading to improved institutional performance metrics. This initiative highlights the necessity of integrating formal note-writing training within residency curricula to meet evolving documentation demands.