Advanced Health Assessment - Quiz 2 Study Guide.doc
Advanced Health Assessment - Quiz 2 Study GAdvanced Health Assessment – Quiz 2 Study Guide Focus on your studies on the readings from Bates’ text Chs. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 and the corresponding PowerPoint (PPT) slides/audio lectures. Differentiate comprehensive versus a focused (or episodic) history and physical examination Comprehensive (Complete) Assessment Appropriate for new patients in the office or hospital Always should be done on all new patients never seen before Provides fundamental and personalized knowledge about the patient Strengthens the clinician-patient relationship Helps identify or rule out physical causes related to patient concerns Provides a baseline for future assessments Creates a platform for health promotion through education and counselling Develops proficiency in the essential skills of physical examination Requires a greater length of time Includes all of the patient’s past medical history, family history, personal and social history, medications, allergies, and complete review of all systems (ROS) Focused (Episodic, Problem-oriented, SOAP) Appropriate for established patients, especially during routine or urgent care visits Addresses focused concerns or symptoms Assesses symptoms restricted to a specific body system Addresses only specific body systems as it relates to the reported concerns/ symptoms Applies examination methods relevant to assessing the concern or problem as thoroughly and carefully as possible Elements of the SOAP note Subjective vs. Objective data Subjective Data What the person tells you The history from chief complaint through review of systems Reported by the patient Patient perspective Patient’s feelings, beliefs, desires, etc. Information that cannot be measured Makes up your health history portion of clinical encounter Objective Data What you detect during examination All physical examination findings What you see, hear, feel, touch, smell Labs and diagnostic tests Information that can be directly observed and measured by the clinician Components of a health history AND what type of information is collected in each area Initial Information Date and time of evaluation of the patient Identifying Data Age and gender Source and Reliability Who is providing you the information? Patient? Family? Friend? Is the patient reliable? Chief complaint (C/C) Harryson Reason for the patient visit Should be documented in the patient’s own words (or that of the person reporting if not the patient) Should be documented in one sentence Examples: “I have chest pain” “I am here for an annual wellness visit” “Mom was acting confused” In a case where someone other than patient is reporting A poor example is “I am here for a follow up” Better is “I’m here for a follow-up evaluation of my sprained ankle” History of Present Illness (HPI) Expansion of the chief complaint, as if you are telling a story Sequential (chronological description) of the patient’s subjective report of experiences/ symptoms related to the chief complaint or reason for clinical encounter Should include a relative description of the patient’s complaints and issues, baseline health, a narrative of events leading up to the visit Includes pertinent positives and pertinent negatives Pertinent positives – patient reports or affirms a finding (what the patient has) Examples: weight loss within 3 weeks or cough with mucous production Pertinent negatives – patient denies a finding (patient does not have) No nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, denies fever Should always include pertinent positives and negatives in your HPI and ROS Attributes of each system reported should be fully described Organize questions about reported symptoms using OLD CARTS and Box 3-4 in text OLD CARTS is used to pursue the attributes of patient’s symptoms and is documented as part of the HPI With example: chest pain O – onset When did the chest pain start? (Document the actual date if possible) Ask what the patient was doing (what caused it?) L – location Can you tell me exactly where the pain in? Ask the patient to point to it D – duration How long did/does the pain last? Ask if they have any more occurrences of the chest pain and describe each instance C – character Describe what the pain feels like, exactly how they feel Provide descriptor words such as sharp, burning, stabbing, pressure, etc. A – aggravating / alleviating factors Does anything make the pain feel worse or better
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