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PATIENT VERSUS CLIENT
Patient seeks medical care/treatment, more passive
Client seeks professional advice or service, more active strength based approach
Clinical reasoning defined
process of thinking logically and sensibly
Dual Processing Theory thinking systems
System 1: Quick autonomous. Inductive reasoning
System 2: Analytical, effortful. Deductive reasoning
During clinical decision making can steps be repeated
Yes at any time due to new findings, review of judgement, outcomes, new goals, etc.
Whats the entry point to clinical decision making
Physical Exam
Examination Process Steps
Chart Review
Initial Inspection
History & ROS
Physical Exam (Systems Review & Test/Measure)
Chart Review
completed before performing the history taking portion of the patient/client examination, and before every treatment session
Information Gathered
Past Med. History, prior level of function, medical status, laboratory values/medication, mental status, fall risk, movement precautions, weight bearing status
Initial Inspection
first thing you see
- In acute care, you will see what lines or tubes are hooked up, machines, etc.
- Outpatient you encounter a patient in the waiting room, notice how they get up, assistive devices, etc.
History & Review of Systems
SUBJECTIVE HISTORY REVIEW
Reasons to screen include direct access, early detection, disease progression, referral source, and new info from the patient
Systems Review
OBJECTIVE TESTING; first part of the physical exam after history
Ex.) CV, Pulm. MSK, NM, Cog.
Tests and Measures
second part of the physical exam and are based on systems review
When would patient/client management go on for Interprofessional Collaboration
May occur at different points of the examination process
Referral to other HCPs based on data collected during the ROS & SR.
Always reflecting on the data you are collecting
May need to refer or collaborate at any point during the exam A team approach may be optimal for the patient
How much of the population will be older than 65 in 2050
20%
4 Questions the patient in front of you will ask
How long will it take (Prognosis)?
What's wrong with me (Diagnosis)?
What are you gonna do for me?
What can I do for myself (Intervention)?
Impairment vs. Tissue-Based Hypotheses
Supraspinatous Tendinosis (tissue-based)
Neck pain with mobility deficits (impairment-based)
Clinical Evaluation how much is subjective and objective
80% subjective examination; 20% is through objective measures
Constitutional signs/symptoms are things like
nausea, diaphoresis, sweats, fever, vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, pallor, fatigue, weakness
Structure and Process of History Taking
Provide Structure and Build the Relationship
Involve the Patient
Verbal and Nonverbal Communication
Proper Verbal and Nonverbal Communication with the patient
Active Listening, Mirror patients body language, Mimicry, Adjust voice and speech to manage pace
Close ended questions
questions asking for specific info "does your should hurt when you reach overhead"
Parallel Questioning
aligning questions with patient story, let patient finish monologue, then question where you left off
Directive questioning
purposeful open ended questions "when do you think you're overloading your shoulder"
PHQ-9
This questionnaire is a self-administered tool that assesses depressive symptoms based on the DSM-5 criteria
Patient Specific Functional Scale
3-5 things to improve upon based on involvement of PY
Disablement vs. Disability
Disablement = functional consequence of acute or chronic conditions, comprised of ability to meet needs
Disability = response to health condition that results in activty or participation restriction