efficiency, move head to toe, examine the patient from their right side
Active listening, empathic responses, guided questioning, nonverbal communication, validation,
reassurance, partnering, summarization, transitions, empowering the patient
Active Listening- closely attending to what the patient is communicating, connecting to the
patient’s emotional state and using verbal and nonverbal skills to encourage the patient to expand
on his or her feelings and concerns.
Empathic Responses-the capacity to identify with the patient and feel the patient’s pain as your
own, then respond in a supportive manner.
Guided Questioning- show your sustained interest in the patient’s feelings and deepest
disclosures and allows the interviewer to facilitate full communication, in the patient’s own
words, without interruption.
Non-verbal- includes eye contact, facial expression, posture, head position and movement such
as shaking or nodding, interpersonal distance, and placement of the arms or legs-crossed, neutral,
or open.
Validation- helps to affirm the legitimacy of the patient’s emotional experience.
Reassurance- an appropriate way to help the patient feel that problems have been fully
understood and are being addressed.
,Partnering- building rapport with patients, express your commitment to an ongoing relationship.
Summarization- giving a capsule summary of the patient’s story during the course of the
interview to communicate that you have been listening carefully.
Transitions- inform your patient when you are changing directions during the interview.
Empowering the Patient- empower the patient to ask questions, express their concerns, and probe
your recommendations in order to encourage them to adopt your advice, make lifestyle changes,
or take medications as prescribed.
Advanced: Determine scope of assessment: Focused vs. Comprehensive: pg5
Comprehensive: Used for patients you are seeing for the first time in the office or hospital.
Includes all the elements of the health history and complete physical examination. A source
fundamental and personalized knowledge about the patient, strengthens the clinician-patient
relationship.
● Is appropriate for new patients in the office or hospital
● 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 counseling
, ● Develops proficiency in the essential skills of physical
examination
Flexible Focused or problem-oriented assessment:For patients you know well returning for
routine care, or those with specific “urgent care” concerns like sore throat or knee pain. You will
adjust the scope of your history and physical examination to the situation at hand, keeping
several factors in mind: the magnitude and severity of the patient’s problems; the need for
thoroughness; the clinical setting—inpatient or outpatient, primary or subspecialty care; and the
time available.
●Is appropriate for established patients, especially during routine
or urgent care visits
●Addresses focused concerns or symptoms
●Assesses symptoms restricted to a specific body system
●Applies examination methods relevant to assessing the concern or
problem as thoroughly and carefully as possible
Tangential lighting: JVD, thyroid gland, and apical impulse of heart.
Components of the Health History Jenna/Ashley
Initial information
Identifying data and source of the history; reliability
Identifying data- age, gender, occupation, marital status
Source of history- usually patient. Can be: a family member or friend, letter of referral, or
clinical record.
Reliability- Varies according to the patient’s memory, trust, and mood.
Chief Complaint
, Chief Complaint- Make every attempt to quote the patient’s own words.
Present Illness
Complete, clear and chronological description of the problem prompting the patient visit
Onset, setting in which it occurred, manifestations and any treatments
Should include 7 attributes of a symptom:
●Location
●Quality
●Quantity or severity
●Timing, onset, duration, frequency
●Setting in which it occurs
●Aggravating or relieving factors
● Associated manifestations
-Differential diagnosis is derived from the “pertinent positives” and “pertinent negatives” when
doing Review of Systems that are relevant to the chief complaint. A list of potential causes for
the patients problems.
-Present illness should reveal patient’s responses to his or her symptoms and what effect this has
on their life.
-Each symptom needs its own paragraph and a full description.
-Medication should be documented, name, dose, route, and frequency. Home remedies, non-
prescriptions drugs, vitamins, minerals or herbal supplements, oral contraceptives, or borrowed
medications.
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