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Inquiry

Inquiry. Department of Gastroenterology Ren-Ji Hospital Prof. Zhi Hua Ran. Inquiry . It is the method that physician obtain the clinic data of patient, and further propose clinical judgment by comprehensive analysis Inquiry is the major methods of history taking

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Inquiry

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  1. Inquiry Department of Gastroenterology Ren-Ji Hospital Prof. Zhi Hua Ran

  2. Inquiry • It is the method that physician obtain the clinic data of patient, and further propose clinical judgment by comprehensive analysis • Inquiry is the major methods of history taking • It is a fundamental skill that every physician should know

  3. Basic principles • Good communication skills are the foundation of excellent medical care • It improves health outcomes by resolving symptoms and reducing patients’ psychological distress and anxiety • The quality of patient care depends greatly on the skills of interviewing, because the relationship that a patient has with a physician is probably the most extraordinary relationship between two human beings

  4. Basic principles • To gather all basic information pertinent (相关的)to the patient’s illness and the patient’s adaptation to illness • An experienced interviewer considers all the aspects of the patient’s presentation and follows the leads that appear to deserve the most attention

  5. Basic principles • The clinician must be keenly aware of all clues, subtle or obvious • Although body language is important, the spoken word remains the central diagnostic tool in medicine • The art of talking and listening continues to be the central part of the doctor-patient interaction • Once all the clues from the history have been gathered, the assimilation(消化) of those clues into an ultimate diagnosis is relatively easy

  6. Basic principles • Communication is the key to a successful interviews • It must be able to ask questions of the patient freely • These questions must always be easily understood and keyed to the medical sophistication of the patient

  7. Content of inquiry • General data • Chief complaint • History of present illness • Past history • Review of systems • Personal history • Marital history • Menstrual history • Family history

  8. General data Name Sex Age birth place Native place Nation Marital status Mail address Profession Data of admission Data of record Source Reliability

  9. Chief complaint • It is the patient’s brief statement explaining why he or she sought medical attention • It is the answer to the question “What is the problem that brought you to the hospital?” • In the written history, it is frequently a quoted statement of the patient

  10. Chief complaint • It should be one or two sentences including the time periods from onset to seeing the doctor • Not the diagnostic term from the doctor

  11. Chief complaint “Chest pain for the past 5 hours” “Terrible nausea and vomiting for 2 days” “Headache for the last week, on and off”

  12. History of present illness • The history of the present illness refers to the recent changes in health that led the patient to seek medical attention at this time • It describes the information relevant to the chief complaint • It should answer the questions what, when, how, where, which, who, and why

  13. History of present illness • Chronology(按年月次序的排列) is the most practical frameworks(框架) for organizing the history • It enables the interviewer to comprehend(理解)the sequential development of the underlying pathologic process

  14. History of present illness • In this section the doctor gathers all the necessary information, starting with the first symptoms of the present illness and following its progression to present day • It is important to verify that the patient was entirely well before the earliest symptom to establish the beginning of the current illness

  15. History of present illness • The character of symptoms location identity during intensity relief or provoke factors(触发因素) • Time during may be lasted for years, months, days • It may also be of hours or minutes (in those with acute onset)

  16. History of present illness • Causes and inducing factors investigate the causes that related with onset of the disease: trauma intoxication infection inducing factors: emotion diet environment • Caution the causes that recently occurred may be easily recognized by the patient hardly recognized by the patients if the causes are complicated or if the courses lasted for years

  17. History of present illness • Progression including the changes in predominant symptoms or occurrence of new symptoms cirrhotic patient manifested some neurological signs, hepatic encephalopathy should be highly suspected chest pain lasted unusually and more severely than previous episodes(发作)of angina, myocardial infarction should be suspected

  18. History of present illness • Accompanying symptoms it is useful in differential diagnosis e.g. patient manifested nausea, vomiting and fever, accompanied with jaundice and/or shock, acute biliary infection or acute pancreatitis should be considered

  19. History of present illness • Course of diagnosis and treatment The diagnosis and treatment the patient had received in other medical institution may provide informative data The diagnosis made by others could not replace one’s diagnosis • General condition during the course it may also provide some useful information

  20. Past medical history • The past medical history consists of the overall assessment of the patient’s health before the present illness include a statement of childhood and adult problems • Parameters including: general state of health past illness injuries hospitalizations surgery allergies immunizations substance abuse diet sleep patterns current medications alternative therapies

  21. Past medical history • The patient should be asked about any prior injuries or accidents The type of injury and the data are important • All hospitalization must be indicated, including admissions for medical, surgical, and psychiatric illness • All surgical procedures should be specified. The type of procedure, data, hospital • All allergies should be described. These include environmental, ingestible, and drug related • It is important to determine the immunization history of all patients

  22. Review of systems • The review of systems summarizes in terms of body systems all the symptoms that may have been overlooked in the history of the present illness or in the medical history • By reviewing in an orderly manner the list of possible symptoms, the interviewer can specifically check each system and uncover additional symptoms of “unrelated” illness not yet discussed

  23. Review of systems • The review of systems is best organized from the head down to the extremities • Patients are told that they are going to be asked whether they have ever had a particular symptom and should answer “Yes” or “no”

  24. Review of systems • Respiratory system cough: identity frequency sputum production: quantity appearance coughing up blood shortness of breath • Cardiovascular system chest pain shortness of breath with exertion palpitations shortness of breath lying flat sudden shortness of breath while sleeping history of heart attack

  25. Review of systems • GI system appetite excessive hunger excessive thirst nausea constipation diarrhea heartburn vomiting abdominal pain change in stool color/caliber/consistency frequency of bowel movements vomiting blood rectal bleeding black tarry stools

  26. Review of systems • Urinary system frequency urgency incontinence difficulty in the starting the stream excessive urination pain on urination burning blood in the urine bed-wetting flank pain history of retention urine color urine odor

  27. Review of systems • Hematological system pallor yellow skin petechia purpura ecchymosis hematoma • Endocrinological system and metabolite weakness profound sweating abnormal appetite weight change

  28. Review of systems • Neurologic system fainting dizziness mood changes loss of memory speech disorders general behavioral change disorientation • Musculoskeletal weakness paralysis muscle stiffness limitation of movement joint pain joint stiffness arthritis gout deformities

  29. Review of systems • Review of systems may involved lots of clinical diseases • One has to understand the pathophysilogical meaning of these signs and symptoms • In each systems, it is practical to ask several symptoms • The inquire may be intensified if there is positive symptoms/signs is elicited

  30. Personal history • Social experiences birth place living area and duration particularly those epidemical areas education living condition hobby • Profession and working place/condition • Habit smoking (amount and duration) anesthetic drug(麻醉药)

  31. Unhealthy sexual history • Unhealthy sexual history: Sexually transmitted disease

  32. Marital history • Marital history: single or married age of marriage heath condition of partner

  33. Menstrual history • Menstrual history age of menarche (first menstrual cycle) cycles and flow lasting amount of vaginal bleeding/discharges menopause and age of menopause • Format flow lasting(day) menarche last menopause cycle(day)

  34. Family history • It provides information about the health of the entire family,living and dead • Pay attention to possible genetic and environmental aspects of disease that might have implications for the patient

  35. Skill and methods in inquire • Getting started • The narrative(叙述) • The closing

  36. Getting started • The diagnostic process begins at the first moment of meeting • One should be dressed appropriately, wearing a white coat with one’s name badge identifying one as a physician • One should make patient as comfortable as possible • One should sit in a chair directly facing the patient in order to make good eye contact

  37. Getting started • The interviewer should sit in a relaxed position without crossing arms across the chest • The crossed-arms position is not appropriate, as this body language projects an attitude of superiority and may interfere with the progress of the interview

  38. Getting started • Making the patient feel that you are interested and concerned • Once the introduction has been made, you may begin the interview by asking a general ,open-ended question “What medical problem has brought you to the hospital?” • This type of opening remark allows the patient to speak first • The interviewer can determine the patient’s chief complaint or the problem that is regarded as paramount(极为重要的)

  39. Getting started • If the patient says “Haven’t you read my records?” • It is correct to say “No, I’ve been asked to interview you without any prior information” or “I would like to hear your story in your words” • Patients can determine very quickly if you are friendly and personally interested in them

  40. The narrative • Novice (初学者)interviewers are often worried about remembering the patient’s history • It is poor form to write extensive notes during the interview • Attention should be focused more on what the person is saying and less on the written word

  41. The narrative • After the introductory story, the interviewer should proceed to questions related to the chief complaint • These should naturally evolve into questions related to the other formal parts of the medical history, such as the present illness,past illnesses, social and family history, and review of body system

  42. The narrative • Patients should largely be allowed to conduct the narrative in their own way • The interviewer must select certain aspects that require further details and guard the patient toward them

  43. The narrative • Overdirection is to be avoided, because this stifles the interview and prevents important points from being clarified • When patients use vague(含糊的) terms (术语)such as “often”, “a little”, “sometimes”, the interviewer must always for clarification, ask “What does ‘sometimes’ mean?” or “How often is ‘often’?”

  44. The narrative • The interviewer should be alert (警觉)for subtle clues from the patient to guide the interview further • There are a variety of technique to encourage and sustain the narrative

  45. The closing • By theconclusion of the interview, the interviewer should have a clear impression of the reason why the patient sought medical help, the history of the present illness, the patient’s past medical history • If any part of the history needs clarification, this is the time to obtain it

  46. The closing • At the conclusion, it is polite to encourage the patient to discuss any additional problems or to ask any questions “Is there anything else you would like to tell me that I have not already asked?” • Thank the patient and tell him or her that you are ready to begin the physical examination

  47. Basic interviewing techniques • Questioning(询问) • Silence (沉默) • Facilitation(简单化) • Confrontation(面对面) • Interpretation(解释) • Reflection(反省) • Support (支持)

  48. Questioning Open ended questions • They are used to ask the patient for general information • It is most useful in opening up the interview or for changing the topic to be discussed • An open-ended question allows the patient to tell his story spontaneously and does not presuppose a specific answer

  49. Open-ended questioning What kind of medical problem are you having? Can you describe your feelings when you get the pain? Are you having stomach pain? Tell me about it

  50. Direct questioning • After a period of open-ended questioning, the interviewer should direct the attention to specific facts learned during the open-ended question period • This type of question gives the patient little room for explanation • A direct question can usually be answered in one word or a brief sentence

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