---
name: documenting-mental-status-exams
language: en
description: Creates structured MSE documentation covering appearance, behavior, speech, mood, thought, cognition, and insight. Use when documenting mental status, writing MSE sections, or describing psychiatric findings.
tags:
  - documentation
  - psychiatry
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Psychiatry
    - Psychology
    - Behavioral Health
  document_types:
    - Clinical Documentation
  skill_modes:
    - Documentation
---

# Documenting Mental Status Exams

Creates structured MSE documentation covering appearance, behavior, speech, mood, thought process, thought content, perception, cognition, insight, and judgment in compliance with clinical documentation standards.

## Why This Skill Exists

The Mental Status Examination (MSE) is the psychiatric equivalent of the physical exam — it is the objective, systematic assessment of a patient's psychological functioning at a specific point in time. Incomplete or formulaic MSE documentation (e.g., "MSE within normal limits") is the most frequently cited deficiency in psychiatric chart audits. CMS, The Joint Commission, and state licensing boards require that MSE findings be documented with sufficient specificity to support the diagnostic formulation, risk assessment, and treatment plan.

In malpractice litigation, the MSE often becomes the focal point of expert review. A well-documented MSE demonstrates that the clinician performed a thorough assessment; a cursory or templated MSE suggests the evaluation was superficial. Clinically, serial MSE documentation enables tracking of treatment response, detection of emerging side effects (e.g., tardive dyskinesia, cognitive dulling), and identification of acute changes requiring intervention.

---

## Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)

1. What is the clinical context? (initial evaluation, follow-up visit, inpatient daily note, emergency assessment, pre-procedure clearance) — default: initial evaluation
2. What is the patient's current setting? (outpatient office, emergency department, inpatient unit, telepsychiatry, forensic setting) — default: outpatient office
3. Are there specific MSE domains of concern? (psychosis, cognitive decline, mood instability, catatonia, intoxication) — default: complete MSE
4. Is this a baseline or serial MSE? (first encounter vs. change-tracking from prior exam) — default: baseline
5. Were standardized cognitive tests administered? (MoCA, MMSE, clock draw, digit span, trails) — default: clinical assessment only
6. Are there language or cultural considerations affecting the exam? (interpreter needed, educational level, primary language) — default: English-speaking
7. Is the patient cooperative and reliable? — default: assess at time of examination
8. Is a focused vs. comprehensive MSE appropriate? — default: comprehensive

### Documents to Request

- Prior MSE documentation for comparison (if serial assessment)
- Current medication list (for side-effect-related findings: EPS, sedation, cognitive effects)
- Nursing observations and behavioral notes (inpatient)
- Results of any standardized tests administered (MoCA, MMSE scores)
- Vital signs and blood alcohol level if relevant
- Brain imaging results if cognitive assessment is the focus

---

## Step 1: General Appearance and Behavioral Observations

Document what is directly observed, not inferred:

**Appearance:**
- Apparent age relative to stated age (appears stated age, younger, older)
- Body habitus and nutritional status
- Grooming and hygiene (well-groomed, disheveled, malodorous, evidence of self-neglect)
- Attire (appropriate to weather/setting, disheveled, unusual, layered inappropriately)
- Distinguishing features (scars, tattoos, self-injury marks — document location and appearance)
- Level of distress (none apparent, mild, moderate, severe)

**Psychomotor Activity:**
- Psychomotor agitation (restlessness, pacing, hand-wringing, fidgeting, inability to sit still)
- Psychomotor retardation (slowed movements, long latency to respond, reduced spontaneous movement)
- Abnormal movements: tremor (resting vs. action), tardive dyskinesia (use AIMS rating if indicated), akathisia, dystonic posturing, stereotypies, tics, catatonic features (waxy flexibility, posturing, negativism, mutism, echolalia, echopraxia)
- Gait (steady, unsteady, ataxic, shuffling, wide-based)

**Behavior and Engagement:**
- Eye contact (appropriate, avoidant, intense/staring, intermittent)
- Cooperation (cooperative, guarded, hostile, passive, uncooperative)
- Rapport (easily established, difficult to establish, superficial)
- Attitude toward examiner (friendly, suspicious, seductive, contemptuous, apathetic)

---

## Step 2: Speech and Language

Document speech characteristics as distinct from thought content:

- **Rate:** Normal, rapid/pressured, slow, variable
- **Rhythm:** Regular, irregular, stuttering, cluttering
- **Volume:** Normal, loud, soft/whispered, variable
- **Tone:** Normal prosody, monotone, exaggerated, tremulous
- **Spontaneity:** Spontaneous, requires prompting, mute
- **Latency:** Normal, increased (long pauses before responding), decreased
- **Articulation:** Clear, slurred, dysarthric
- **Amount:** Normal, verbose/overproductive, poverty of speech (reduced quantity), poverty of content (normal quantity but limited information)
- **Language:** Fluent, non-fluent, paraphasic errors, neologisms (from a speech/language perspective, not thought disorder)

Note: Pressured speech with flight of ideas suggests mania. Poverty of speech with increased latency suggests depression or negative symptoms. Disorganized speech patterns should be documented under Thought Process.

---

## Step 3: Mood and Affect

**Mood** (subjective — patient's self-reported emotional state):
- Record in patient's own words using quotation marks: "I feel empty," "anxious," "fine" (note incongruence if affect suggests otherwise)
- If patient cannot articulate mood, document: "Patient unable to identify mood" or "Patient states mood is 'I don't know'"

**Affect** (objective — clinician's observation):
- **Quality/type:** Euthymic, dysphoric, euphoric, anxious, irritable, angry, fearful, apathetic
- **Range:** Full, restricted/constricted, blunted, flat
- **Intensity:** Normal, heightened, diminished
- **Stability:** Stable, labile (document specific shifts observed)
- **Congruence:** Congruent with mood and thought content, or incongruent (e.g., smiling while describing suicidal ideation — always document this)
- **Appropriateness:** Appropriate to topic, inappropriate (e.g., laughing when discussing death of family member)
- **Reactivity:** Reactive (brightens with humor, tearful with sad content) or non-reactive (flat regardless of topic)

---

## Step 4: Thought Process and Content

**Thought Process** (how the patient thinks — the form of thought):
- Goal-directed and logical (normal)
- Circumstantial (eventually reaches the point after excessive detail)
- Tangential (departs from topic and never returns)
- Loose associations (shifts between unrelated topics without logical connection)
- Flight of ideas (rapid shifts with discernible but tenuous connections)
- Thought blocking (abrupt cessation of speech mid-thought, cannot recall what was being said)
- Perseveration (repetitive return to same topic despite redirection)
- Clang associations (word choice driven by sound rather than meaning)
- Word salad (incomprehensible string of words — incoherence)
- Neologisms (made-up words)

**Thought Content** (what the patient thinks about):
- Suicidal ideation: active/passive, plan, intent, means, timeline — or explicitly denied
- Homicidal ideation: target, plan, intent — or explicitly denied
- Delusions: type (persecutory, grandiose, referential, somatic, erotomanic, nihilistic, bizarre), conviction level, impact on behavior
- Obsessions: intrusive, unwanted, ego-dystonic thoughts with recognized irrationality
- Phobias: specific fears with avoidance behavior
- Preoccupations: topics the patient returns to repeatedly
- Overvalued ideas: strongly held beliefs that are not delusional in quality but dominate thinking
- Ideas of reference: belief that events or others' actions have personal significance

---

## Step 5: Perceptual Disturbances

- **Auditory hallucinations:** Voices (number, gender, familiarity, content, command hallucinations specifically — document whether commands are to harm self or others)
- **Visual hallucinations:** Formed vs. unformed, content, context (visual hallucinations in clear sensorium suggest organic etiology — delirium, substance intoxication/withdrawal, Lewy body dementia)
- **Tactile hallucinations:** Formication (sensation of insects — associated with stimulant use, alcohol withdrawal), other somatic sensations
- **Olfactory/gustatory hallucinations:** Rare, may suggest temporal lobe pathology
- **Illusions:** Misperceptions of real stimuli (distinct from hallucinations)
- **Depersonalization:** Feeling detached from self, feeling robotic, unreal
- **Derealization:** Feeling the environment is unreal, dreamlike, distorted

---

## Step 6: Cognitive Assessment

Document the following at minimum:
- **Orientation:** Person, place, time (day/date/month/year), situation
- **Attention/concentration:** Serial 7s, spell WORLD backwards, digit span (forward and reverse), months of the year backward
- **Memory:** Immediate recall (3 words), short-term (3 words after 5 minutes), remote (personal historical facts, public knowledge)
- **Fund of knowledge:** Appropriate to educational background
- **Abstraction:** Proverb interpretation, similarities (e.g., "How are an apple and orange alike?")
- **Calculation:** Simple arithmetic appropriate to education

If formal cognitive screening is warranted, administer and document:
- MoCA (Montreal Cognitive Assessment): Score /30, cutoff 26 for normal (adjust +1 point for ≤12 years education)
- MMSE (Mini-Mental State Examination): Score /30, cutoff 24 for normal
- Clock Drawing Test: document specific errors (planning, spatial, perseveration, number placement)

---

## Step 7: Insight and Judgment

**Insight** (understanding of illness):
- Good: Recognizes illness, understands need for treatment, can articulate symptoms
- Partial: Acknowledges some symptoms but minimizes severity or denies illness label
- Poor: Denies illness entirely, attributes symptoms to external causes
- Absent: No awareness of any psychiatric difficulty

**Judgment** (decision-making capacity in daily life):
- Good: Makes decisions consistent with self-interest and safety
- Fair: Occasional lapses in judgment without serious consequences
- Poor: Repeatedly makes decisions contrary to self-interest or safety
- Impaired: Requires supervision for basic safety decisions

Document specific examples supporting the insight and judgment assessment rather than using labels alone.

---

## Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)

1. Are all MSE domains addressed with specific descriptors (not "WNL" or "unremarkable" without elaboration)?
2. Is mood recorded in the patient's own words with quotation marks?
3. Are positive findings described with clinical specificity (type, severity, impact)?
4. Are pertinent negatives documented (e.g., "denies auditory/visual hallucinations," "no suicidal or homicidal ideation")?
5. Is the MSE internally consistent with the diagnostic formulation and risk assessment?

---

## Quality Audit

- [ ] All 10 MSE domains addressed (appearance, behavior, speech, mood, affect, thought process, thought content, perceptions, cognition, insight/judgment)
- [ ] Mood documented in patient's own words with quotation marks
- [ ] Affect described with quality, range, intensity, congruence, and reactivity
- [ ] Suicidal and homicidal ideation explicitly assessed and documented (even if denied)
- [ ] Cognitive assessment includes orientation, attention, and memory at minimum
- [ ] Psychomotor findings described specifically (not just "no abnormalities")
- [ ] Pertinent negatives documented for each domain
- [ ] Findings consistent with stated diagnoses
- [ ] No prohibited shorthand ("MSE WNL," "no acute distress" as complete MSE)
- [ ] Serial MSE documents change from prior examination when applicable
- [ ] Tardive dyskinesia screening documented if patient is on antipsychotics
- [ ] Cultural and linguistic factors noted if affecting interpretation

---

## Guidelines

1. Never write "MSE within normal limits" or "unremarkable" as a complete MSE — every domain must have specific descriptors documenting what was observed.
2. Always separate mood (subjective, patient's words) from affect (objective, clinician's observation) — these are distinct constructs.
3. Document pertinent negatives with the same diligence as positive findings — "denies hallucinations" is clinically meaningful documentation.
4. When describing psychomotor findings, use specific terms (psychomotor retardation, akathisia, tardive dyskinesia) rather than vague descriptions ("seemed slow").
5. Cognitive assessment must be interpreted in context — a MoCA score of 22 in a patient with a 6th-grade education has different implications than in a retired professor.
6. If the patient is uncooperative or unable to participate in portions of the MSE, document what could not be assessed and why, rather than omitting the domain.
7. Use the AIMS (Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale) for tardive dyskinesia screening in any patient currently or previously on antipsychotic medications.
