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The Story We Leave Behind

Why Complete Documentation Is a Sacred Trust, Not Just a Task

JoNel Chensky, Director of Respiratory Therapy on Influential Women
JoNel Chensky
Director of Respiratory Therapy
Larchwood Care Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation
The Story We Leave Behind

Documentation Isn't a Record

It's the Only Evidence the Story Ever Happened.

We often think of documentation as the task we complete before the end of a shift.

Something left until the last minute.

  • A requirement.
  • A legal safeguard.
  • An interruption.

Some lessons are learned through education. Others are learned when routine parts of our practice are suddenly viewed through an entirely different lens.

Those lessons have a way of changing not only what we do...

They change how we think.

It changed how I think.

What we miss is that documentation isn't written for today.

It's not written simply to satisfy a policy.

It's written for every person who will one day need to understand what happened after we're gone.

It's the patient's voice.

It's our voice.

It's the voice of truth.

For years, I repeated the phrase every clinician knows by heart.

"If it wasn't documented, it didn't happen."

I believed it.

I taught it.

I expected it.

Looking back, I understood the words.

I hadn't yet experienced their weight.

At least... not until I was the one reviewing and explaining what had happened that day.

The Story Had Never Been Written

During a comprehensive review of patient care, every assessment, every intervention, every timestamp, and every clinical decision were examined in extraordinary detail.

I reviewed the record, looking for evidence of our care.

It was surprisingly difficult to find.

Not because the care hadn't happened.

The documentation couldn't prove it.

Because the story had never been written.

I already knew my team delivered exceptional respiratory care.

Families told me.

Surveyors recognized it.

I had witnessed it myself.

But reading that chart felt like standing in the middle of a desert while a lone tumbleweed rolled by.

You knew life had been there.

You just couldn't see much evidence of it.

We got through the review by the skin of our teeth.

I asked myself:

Could I walk through this review again and feel confident the documentation would tell the full story?

The answer was painfully simple.

No.

Not "maybe."

Not "probably."

No.

In that moment, I understood why every detail mattered.

A family wasn't looking for perfect documentation.

They were looking for answers.

The Story Stopped at the Bedside

Walking away from that experience, I realized something uncomfortable.

We weren't failing because the care was poor.

We were failing because the story stopped at the bedside.

The care was there.

But the documentation didn't reflect the story of the care that had been given.

That wasn't a failure of my team.

It was a failure of my expectations.

Somewhere along the way, I had accepted documentation that was good enough instead of asking whether it truly explained the patient's story.

Documentation doesn't end when a shift ends.

That's when its real work begins.

Weeks...

Months...

Sometimes years later...

  • Surveyors.
  • Insurance reviewers.
  • Hospital physicians.
  • Attorneys.
  • Families.
  • Future clinicians.

None of them were there.

Documentation becomes everyone else's reality of the care that was provided.

The medical record has to tell the same story as the care that was delivered.

That's a responsibility I had never fully appreciated until that day.

The Chart Becomes the Story

"If it wasn't documented, it didn't happen."

I no longer think that's the lesson.

The lesson is this:

Documentation is the only part of the care that remains long after it has been given.

Long after the shift ends...

Long after memories fade...

Long after the patient moves on...

The chart becomes the story.

Not the story we remember.

The story we leave behind.

Every note we write becomes part of a story someone else may one day have to finish.

What we leave behind isn't just documentation.

It's trust.

Because the story we leave behind becomes the story others must live with.

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