PBMs Are Criticizing Clinical Notes!
Calling a prescriber’s office due to a prescription with missing elements, or needing clarification, is an inescapable task. If you are failing to document that phone call with a valid clinical note, PBMs may flag the claim upon audit and try to recoup. We have seen OptumRx, Humana, Navitus, and ESI/Prime results citing pharmacy clinical notes. Many of the provider manuals have language on what a valid clinical note should minimally contain. Our experience upon reviewing audit documents, results, and provider manuals is that a clinical note should contain four elements. If the following elements for a clinical note are present, they will reduce an auditor’s ability to recoup upon audit.
PAAS National® recommends these four elements be attached to all clinical notes:
- Date/Time of the call/conversation
- Name and title of who you spoke with
- Specific details about the clarification
- Initials or name of the pharmacy employee making the clarification
PAAS Tips:
- Clinical notes are part of the pharmacy record and must be provided upon any audit
- Train staff and have a policy on how clinical notes will be documented
- Some pharmacies have created a customized ink stamp to aid in the documentation process
- Check with your software vendor on how to utilize the electronic notes field
- Date/time stamped notes provide validation to the PBM that they existed at the time of dispensing
- Humana requires a copy of pharmacy electronically stored notes for various discrepancies
- If you are making handwritten clinical notes, be sure to rescan the prescription into your software
- Annotations made on previous prescriptions may be carried forward to a new prescription (where relevant) if clinically appropriate based on a pharmacist’s professional judgement
- If the patient instructions are clarified, ensure the patient label is updated prior to dispensing to reflect the new directions
- Some provider manuals have language indicating “per MD” is not acceptable (need the name and title of who you spoke with)
- Remember the saying, “if it isn’t documented, it didn’t happen”
- See these Newsline articles for additional tips:
- Carry Clinical Notes Forward for Audit Coverage (June 2023)
- Electronic Clinical Notes: Are They Required? (August 2023)
- Insufficient/Missing Clinical Notes Yield Audit Recoupments (December 2023)
- PBMs Are Criticizing Clinical Notes! - July 15, 2025
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