Documenting Pressure Injuries: What Surveyors Look For
Documentation is not paperwork — it is the legal record of your clinical thinking. When CMS surveyors review a chart, they are looking for a story that is complete, consistent, and chronologically defensible.
The Five Pillars of Defensible Documentation
- Stage on admission. Every pressure injury must be staged within 24 hours of admission and recorded with location, length × width × depth in centimeters, and tissue type.
- Photograph with consent. A single clear image with a sterile ruler and date stamp is worth a paragraph of narrative. Store images in the EHR, not on personal devices.
- Reassess weekly at minimum. Most surveyor citations come from missed weekly reassessments — set a recurring task in the EHR.
- Record interventions, not just findings. "Stage 2 sacrum, 2 × 1 × 0.1 cm" tells half the story. Add: dressing applied, repositioning schedule, support surface, nutrition consult.
- Close the loop on changes. When a wound deteriorates, document the change, the response, and the team notification (provider, wound nurse, family).
Common Documentation Pitfalls
- Using "improving" or "worsening" without measurements
- Missing staging on chronic wounds
- Using "DTI" without follow-up reassessment as the deeper injury declares
- Failing to document refusal of repositioning or nutrition
A Five-Minute Daily Routine
If you adopt only one habit from this article, make it the daily wound bullet:
Location · Stage · Size (L × W × D) · Tissue · Drainage · Periwound · Dressing · Plan
Consistency beats elaboration. The chart that reads the same way every day, with a clear plan and timely reassessments, is the chart that protects both patient and clinician.