Internal Provider Resource
Provider Resource Center
Search clinical workflows, documentation standards, RXNT guidance, prescribing requirements, referral processes, procedure resources, billing readiness, and daily provider expectations.
Documentation
Macros, AI scribe, signatures, and medical necessity.
RXNT Workflows
Encounters, tasks, labs, messages, and chart completion.
Prescribing
Refills, PDMP, controlled substances, and medication safety.
Clinical Workflows
Procedures, labs, screenings, follow-up, and care standards.
Provider Resources
Select a category or search for a clinical, operational, or documentation workflow.
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Every note should clearly support
- The reason for the encounter.
- Relevant history and clinical findings.
- The assessment and status of each condition addressed.
- Clinical decision-making and medical necessity.
- Medication changes, orders, referrals, and procedures.
- Patient education and follow-up instructions.
- The diagnosis and procedure codes selected.
The length of a note does not determine billing level. The
documented work and medical decision-making must support the
services billed.
Provider expectations
- Use the approved TNC macro structure.
- Remove sections that do not apply.
- Update templated language to reflect the actual visit.
- Do not carry forward outdated or incorrect information.
- Use provider-specific or facility-approved short keys.
- Confirm assessment and plan are individualized.
Never leave default normal findings or templated statements in
a note unless those findings were actually assessed.
Workflow
- Use the AI scribe during the visit when appropriate.
- Review all generated content for accuracy.
- Remove unsupported, duplicated, or incorrect information.
- Transfer approved content into the standard macro.
- Confirm diagnoses, plan, orders, and follow-up.
- Delete the temporary AI note after transfer.
- Sign the final provider note.
The provider remains fully responsible for the final medical
record. AI-generated content must never be signed without
review.
Required before closing
Encounters should be completed within 24 business hours unless
an approved exception applies.
Review each business day
- Unsigned and incomplete encounters.
- Assigned tasks and staff messages.
- Patient messages and refill requests.
- Laboratory and imaging results.
- Referral results and specialist records.
- Prior-authorization requests.
- Clinical documents requiring review or signature.
Clear urgent and time-sensitive clinical items first, then
complete routine work before the end of the business day.
Good task communication includes
- The specific action requested.
- Relevant patient or clinical context.
- Priority or urgency.
- Assigned owner.
- Required completion date when applicable.
- Documentation of the outcome.
Do not use a routine task for an emergency or time-sensitive
clinical situation requiring immediate verbal escalation.
Provider responsibilities
- Review results promptly.
- Identify critical, urgent, and abnormal findings.
- Determine appropriate follow-up or treatment.
- Communicate results to the patient.
- Document communication attempts and outcome.
- Create orders, referrals, or repeat testing as needed.
- Close or acknowledge the result in RXNT.
Critical results require immediate action and should not remain
in a routine inbox or task queue.
Examples
- Duplicate encounters.
- Test or training encounters.
- Administrative encounters.
- Visits that did not occur.
- Approved no-charge services.
Approved non-billable encounters should be moved to Archive,
not released to billing.
Provider review should confirm
- Current prescription and over-the-counter medications.
- Dose, route, and frequency.
- Medication adherence and patient-reported changes.
- Allergies and adverse reactions.
- Duplicate therapies or interactions.
- Medications discontinued during the visit.
Medical assistants may collect medication information, but the
provider remains responsible for clinical medication decisions.
Review as appropriate
- Annual wellness and preventive visit eligibility.
- Cancer-screening status.
- Immunization history.
- Depression and anxiety screening.
- Fall risk and cognitive screening.
- Diabetes, lipid, and cardiovascular risk monitoring.
- Age- and risk-appropriate counseling.
Common procedures
Sutures
IUD
Toenail Procedures
Ear Lavage
Injections
Nebulizer
EKG
Document
- Clinical indication.
- Consent and timeout when applicable.
- Site, technique, medication, device, or supplies used.
- Findings and outcome.
- Patient tolerance.
- Aftercare and return precautions.
- Specimen handling when applicable.
Provider considerations
- Determine whether the patient has an emergency condition.
- Review available schedule and staffing.
- Confirm whether the concern is appropriate for clinic care.
- Provide emergency instructions when needed.
- Document triage advice or refusal of emergency services.
- Coordinate with front office before adding the appointment.
Walk-in availability must never delay emergency care. Direct
patients to emergency services when the situation requires it.
Confirm before prescribing
- Clear diagnosis and indication.
- Medication allergies and prior reactions.
- Drug interactions and duplicate therapy.
- Appropriate dose, route, frequency, and duration.
- Renal, hepatic, pregnancy, and age-related considerations.
- Required laboratory or clinical monitoring.
- Patient education and follow-up plan.
Before approving
- Confirm medication and requested dose.
- Review last visit and treatment plan.
- Confirm required labs or monitoring are current.
- Check for medication changes or contraindications.
- Determine whether an office visit is required.
- Document approval, denial, or bridge prescription.
Refill requests should be routed to the responsible provider
and not left in a general queue without ownership.
Review as applicable
- Clinical indication and alternative treatments.
- State PDMP.
- Controlled-substance agreement.
- Risk assessment and treatment goals.
- Required urine drug screening.
- Early refill or lost-medication history.
- Concurrent controlled medications.
- Follow-up frequency and monitoring.
Follow state law, prescribing scope, payer requirements, and
current TNC controlled-substance policy.
Provider documentation may need to include
- Diagnosis and clinical severity.
- Previous therapies attempted and outcome.
- Contraindications or intolerance.
- Relevant laboratory, imaging, or examination findings.
- Requested medication, dose, service, or procedure.
- Why the requested option is medically necessary.
Incomplete assessment and plan documentation can delay or
prevent prior-authorization approval.
Referral order should include
- Specific specialty or service requested.
- Diagnosis and clinical reason.
- Relevant history and findings.
- Urgency.
- Requested testing or consultation.
- Supporting records that should accompany the referral.
A referral is not complete when it is sent. Review the
specialist result when it returns and update the care plan.
Provider review includes
- Specialist findings and recommendations.
- Medication or treatment changes.
- Testing or follow-up required.
- Whether the patient needs an appointment.
- Care-plan updates.
- Patient communication when appropriate.
Provider responsibilities
- Complete and sign the note.
- Select accurate diagnoses.
- Document services and procedures performed.
- Support medical necessity.
- Document medication, units, and administration details.
- Complete procedure notes when applicable.
- Resolve documentation queries promptly.
Coding staff may identify concerns, but providers are
responsible for accurate clinical documentation and code
selection within their assigned workflow.
Documentation should reflect
- Number and complexity of problems addressed.
- Amount and complexity of data reviewed or analyzed.
- Risk of patient management.
- Total time when coding based on time.
99213
99214
99215
Medical Decision-Making
Total Time
Avoid selecting an E/M level based only on visit length,
diagnosis count, or note size.
Examples requiring immediate escalation
- Possible stroke or acute coronary syndrome.
- Severe respiratory distress.
- Anaphylaxis.
- Uncontrolled bleeding.
- Severe altered mental status.
- Imminent risk of harm to self or others.
- Any condition beyond the clinic’s capabilities.
Call emergency services when indicated. Do not delay transfer
while completing routine documentation or administrative steps.
Provider expectations
- Document information relevant to patient care.
- Use designated behavioral-health workflows when available.
- Avoid unnecessary disclosure of highly sensitive details.
- Follow applicable confidentiality and release requirements.
- Use crisis and safety documentation when indicated.
- Report privacy concerns immediately.
No matching provider resource found.
Try a broader term such as “documentation,” “RXNT,” “refill,” “referral,” “procedure,” or “billing.”

