Documentation should demonstrate the clinical reasoning process of the practitioner and reflect an accurate representation of services provided to the client and how the client responded to the occupational therapy intervention. In accordance with the American Occupational Therapy Association’s Vision 2025, documentation should also include how occupational therapy improves client’s health, well-being, and quality of life. The rate of adoption of electronic health records increases annually among many different healthcare professions as there is evidence to support electronic documentation is faster than handwritten documentation and improves communication among multidisciplinary teams of professionals with improved access to client health records. Some occupational therapy practitioners adopt electronic health records; however, many continue to use the handwritten form of documentation. The proposed capstone project will include a single-participant case report of an occupational therapy practitioner’s documentation. The comparison of the participant’s handwritten documentation to her electronic documentation will inform the profession of occupational therapy by exploring the quality of the occupational therapy practitioner’s paper and electronic documentation to determine the improved efficiency, effectiveness, and accuracy of electronic health records.