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Advice
by Charlotte Michael Versagi, L.M.T.
Q: "What's
the point of SOAP charting? Should I be doing this for all my clients?"
Answer:
When it comes to charting
wisdom, we'll start with Alice Funk, a nurse and massage therapist
in Lake Charles, Louisiana, with 26 years' experience in patient
care.
"I think everybody in the
massage business should SOAP [chart]," Funk says.
"Even if you're working in a spa, you never know if you're
going to need it for protection. Of course, the depth of your charting
depends upon your environment. In a spa, all you may do is a quick
history and chart the music and lotion preference of your client.
But by not charting, you do the profession no help. You can't prove
what you did with your hands in a court of law. All you have is
what you charted. Write it down. It's your contract between the
client and yourself.
"When you categorize and fine-tune the information you get
in your intake, you can set up a plan," she continues. "Sure,
you can go and do a massage without a plan, but how do you tailor
it to the client's needs?"
Funk explains how a massage therapist can think carefully about
each step of the intake process and then apply it to a very specific
plan.
"SOAP" stands for Subjective Objective Assessment Plan.
According to Funk, the subjective means "What is the client
telling you?" The objective stands for the data the therapist
takes in from palpation. The assessment is where the therapist evaluates
what she or he is doing. Plan refers to what the client's next session
will consist of, and any homework given to the client.
"This process keeps you in tune," Funk says. "It
sets a focus, forces you to deliver to the client exactly what they
came to you for. It's also an evaluation of what you said you'd
do."
Another nurse/massage therapist, Susie Ogg-Cormier, from Lafayette,
Louisiana, has practiced massage and nursing for 10 years each and
has written a manual on hospital-based massage.
She concurs with Funk's opinion that all massage therapists should
SOAP chart. "The most obvious reason is that most states that
require licensure also require documentation; it's a state-mandated
requirement," Ogg-Cormier says. "Professionalism is another
good reason. You increase your professional status and networking
with other health-care providers if you can offer proof of care.
This increases your accountability to meet health-industry standards
- especially when working with physicians or in a hospital setting.
"Another reason [to chart] is evidence of safe practice,"
Ogg-Cormier continues. "We need to have evidence that we evaluated
the client's particular circumstance for the particular kind of
massage they received."
To learn SOAP charting, Ogg-Cormier recommends the book, Hands
Heal: Documentation for Massage Therapy, A Guide to SOAP Charting,
by Diana L. Thompson.
"The book is pretty much the classic. It's very much oriented
toward the medical model and networking model," Ogg-Cormier
says. "But it's a little more cumbersome for massage therapists
who aren't seeing those types of clients. If you're in the spa industry,
you don't need that depth of charting."
- Charlotte Michael Versagi,
L.M.T., N.C.T.M.B., is a journalist and a massage therapist who
specializes in manual lymph drainage and work with clients with
cancer.
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