Module 2 - Report Writing and Record
Module 2 - Report Writing and Record
Overview
Report Writing
Record-System Components
Report Writing
Importance Reports or Records
1. Reports keep administration informed of accomplishments, problems, and daily activities.
2. Reports provide data on which administration can base decisions.
3. Reports become part of larger reports used for planning decisions or Justify budget requests, code
enforcement, resource allocation.
4. Most reports are public records and may be read by people outside the organization.
5. Information in reports is logical and easily understood.
6. Compilation of either statistical data or research.
7. Legal documentation (EMS/Fire).
8. Record Keeping Regulations.
9. Prepare court cases with relevant facts.
10. Coordinate that particular agency’s activities.
11. Evaluate either individual or department performance.
Request for a report can come from: Employer, client, solicitor, Superior, Supervisor, etc. Clarify
your role in writing the report. Do you have the authority to write a report?
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Report writing criteria
Organization
Heading
- Contains basic information
- Includes date, name of recipient, name of sender, and subject
Introduction
Organization
Body
- Reason for the report
- Statistics
- Research, program, or project Results
- Problems that were uncovered
Conclusion/summary
Report development
Answers who, what, when, where, and why
Contained in body of text
Writing style
Should be concise and simple
Should use tables or graphs to highlight complicated information
Executive summary
Characteristics
- Brief review of key points in a report
- Easy to read and focused
Benefits
- Ensures essential information is read
- Is an attention-getter
- Provides senior management with main points
Executive summary
Contents
- Statement of the problem
- Recommended solutions
- Benefits resulting from following recommendations
- Recommended action in the report
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4. Write the report.
5. Evaluate the report: edit/proofread, revise if necessary.
Effective Reports
Completed Promptly
- Record is made “in the course of business”, not long after the event
- Not in “anticipation of litigation”
- Prompt recollection essential as it becomes part of a permanent record
Completed Thoroughly
- Adequate coverage of assessment, treatment and relative facts when dealing with patient care.
- Should paint a clear, complete picture of what transpired, events leading to and actions after an
incident.
- Should enable another to have a good idea of what happened even though they were not there.
Completed Objectively
- Observations rather than assumptions or conclusions
- Avoid the use of emotionally and value loaded words or phrases
- Based upon your physical findings
- Legally relevant, in compliance with established standards of care
Completed Accurately
- Descriptions should be as precise as possible
- Avoid using non-standard abbreviations or jargon not commonly understood
- If you are not sure how to write it – write it in English
- And YES, spelling does count.
Maintain confidentiality
- Each agency has a policy on the release of information
- Whenever possible, consent should be obtained prior to the release of information
- Copy becomes part of the permanent record
- Statues of limitations is 3 years unless capital offense
A Complete Report should be Timely, Concise, Makes every word count, Concrete fact with descriptive
detail, Clarity, Uses accepted abbreviations and Short sentences or phrases.
A Well Written Report is: concise, clear and well organized, mechanically correct, written in standard
English, legible, and completed on time and written in ink.
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Record - System Components
Record categories
1. Training
Types
- Daily training delivered to individuals or units by a designated instructor
- Company training delivered by a company officer
- Organizational training delivered to all members
- Self-study by an individual
- Individual training provided by an organization
- Special training provided by an outside source
- Degrees, certificates, or levels of training attained by organization members
Privacy requirements
- The Family Education and Privacy Act prohibits release of student testing and
evaluation information
- Scores and personal data are privileged information
Software programs
Legal requirements
Benefits
- Documents for review by appropriate parties
- Training areas are identified
- Documentation of required training completion
- Information for planning and scheduling future training
- Evidence the federal and state training mandates are met
- Layer of legal protection against lawsuits
Record contents
- Course name
- Dates and hours of each training session
- Names of instructors for each training session
- Other information deemed appropriate by the organization
- Student attendance rosters
- Topics taught at each session
- Lesson plans, workbooks and texts, tests, videotapes, and other course materials
- Evaluation scores of students
- Course evaluations
Audits
- NFPA recommends annual audit of record-keeping system
- Audit should identify deficiencies and determine how to correct them
Budget
- Personnel costs
- Materials costs
- Instructor certification and training costs
- Prorated cost of the training facility
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Inventory
Maintenance
- Preventive
- Corrective
Personnel
- Job performance records
- Attendance records
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- Data are raw material from which information is derived
- Analysis looks at the relationship between key elements of the data and similar
information gathered from other reports
- Resulting information is used to justify changes reports
Legal requirements
- State and federal laws generally direct record maintenance
- Record keeping requirements include:
Types of records maintained
Length of retention
Privacy concerns
Public access to some records