#9 Assessment is the collection of data about the individual's health state.
Nursing assessments focus on a client’s responses to a health problem. A nursing assessment should include the client’s perceived needs, health problems, related experience, health practices, values, and lifestyle. To be most useful, the data collected should be relevant to a particular health problem.
#10 This assessment is conducted to:
Establish whether there are any underlying health conditions that could be prevented or managed
Help the health care team and patient develop a plan of care
#12 The major areas of subjective data include:
Biographical information (name, age, religion, ethnicity, occupation)
History of present health concern
Personal health history
Family history
Health and lifestyle practices (e.g., nutrition, activity, cultural beliefs, family structure and function, community environment)
#13 During the physical examination, the nurse obtains objective data to validate subjective data and to complete the assessment phase of the nursing process
The major areas of objective data include:
Physical characteristics ( e.g. skin color, posture)
Body functions (e.g. heart rate, respiratory rate)
Appearance (e.g. dress & hygiene)
Behavior (e.g. mood, affect)
Measurements (e.g. blood pressure, temperature, height)
Results of lab testing (e.g. platelet count, x-ray finding)
#22 Examples:
2 days after surgery a hospitalized person suddenly has a congested cough, shortness of breath & fatigue; history and examination focus on respiratory & cardiovascular systems
In an outpatient clinic a person presents with a rash; history follows the direction of this presenting (acute or chronic onset; associated with a fever, new food, pet, or medicine; localized or generalized)
#23 Follow up assessment
Status of all identified problems should be evaluated at regular and appropriate intervals
Note changes that have occurred
Evaluate whether problem is getting better or worse
Identify coping
3) Follow-up assessment (Cont….)
Examples:
A patient with heart failure may follow up with his or her primary care practitioner at regular intervals to reevaluate medications, identify changes in symptoms, and discuss coping strategies
A patient admitted to the hospital with lung cancer requires frequent assessment of lung sounds
#24 4) Emergency assessment
Ex
A person is brought into an emergency department with suspected substance overdose. The first history questions are “What did you take?” “How much did you take?” and “When?”. The person is questioned simultaneously while his or her airway, breathing, circulation, level of consciousness are being assessed
#34 Emotional state is a states of feeling that result in physical and psychological changes that influence our behavior..
Active listening is the process of :-
Fully attending to what the patient is communicating.
Being aware of the patient’s emotional state
Using verbal and nonverbal skills to encourage the speaker to continue and expand.
#35 Guided Questioning
Your goal is to facilitate full communication, in the patient’s own words, without interruption.
Guided questions show your sustained interest in the patient’s feelings and deepest disclosures
They help you avoid questions that pre-structure or even shut down the patient’s responses. A series of “yes-no” questions makes the patient feel more restricted and passive, leading to significant loss of detail. Instead, use guided questioning to absorb the patient’s full story
#38 Ex
“How many steps can you climb before you get short of breath?” is better than
“Do you get short of breath climbing stairs?
#39 Any tuberculosis, diabetes, asthma, heart condition, or high blood pressure in the family?” may prompt “No” out of sheer confusion.
Try “Do you have any of the following problems?” Be sure to pause and establish eye contact as you list each problem
#40 Almost any specific question can contrast two possible answers.
“Do you bring up any phlegm with your cough, or is it dry?”
#42 Pausing and nodding your head or remaining silent,
yet attentive and relaxed, is a cue for the patient to continue.
Leaning forward, making eye contact, and using phrases like “Uh-huh,” or “Go on,” or “I’m listening” all enhance the flow of the patient’s story
#44 Empathic responses are vital to patient rapport and healing.8,9”10 Empathy “requires a willingness to suffer some of the patient’s pain in the sharing of suffering that is vital to healing.”11 As patients talk with you, they may convey, in their words or facial expressions, feelings they have not consciously acknowledged. These feelings are crucial to understanding their illnesses.
To express empathy, you must first recognize the patient’s feelings, then actively move toward and elicit emotional content.12,13 At first, exploring these feelings may make you feel uncomfortable, but your empathic responses will deepen mutual trust. When you sense unexpressed feelings from the patient’s face, voice, behavior or words, gently ask: “How do you feel about that?” or “That seems to trouble you, can you say more?”
Sometimes a patient’s response may not correspond to your initial assumptions. Responding to a patient that the death of a parent must be upsetting, when in fact the death relieved the patient of a heavy emotional burden, reflects your interpretation, not what the patient feels. Instead, you can ask: “You have lost your father. What has that been like for you?” It is better to ask the patient to expand or clarify a point than assume you understand. Empathy may also be nonverbal—placing your hand on the patient’s arm or offering tissues when the patient is crying. Unless you affirm
your concern, important dimensions of the patient’s experience may go untapped.
Once the patient has shared these feelings, reply with understanding and acceptance. Your responses may be as simple as: “I cannot imagine how hard this must be for you” or “That sounds upsetting” or “You must be feeling sad.” For a response to be empathic, it must convey that you feel what the patient is feeling.
#45 You can use summarization at different points in the interview to structure the visit, especially at times of transition. This technique also allows you to organize your clinical reasoning and convey your thinking to the patient, making the relationship more collaborative. It also helps learners when they draw a blank on what to ask next.
#50 empowering the Patient
The clinician–patient relationship is inherently unequal. Your feelings of inexperience as a student predictably change over time as you grow in clinical experience. They may feel overwhelmed by even scheduling a visit, a task you might take for granted. Differences of gender, ethnicity, race, or socioeconomic status contribute to the power asymmetry of the relationship. Ultimately, however, patients are responsible for their care. When you empower patients to ask questions, express their concerns, and probe your recommendations, they are most likely to adopt your advice, make lifestyle changes, or take medications as prescribed.12
#52 It is critical to use short sentences and words and only communicate essential information.
avoid saying: “Do you still consider yourself a drug addict?” or “Are you wheelchair bound?”
but instead say “Do you still consider yourself a person with an addiction to drugs?” or “Are you a person who uses a wheelchair daily?”
#55 History
Socio-demographic data,
source of referral, Source of history
Chief complaints(c/c), History of present illness (HPI)
History of past illness (HPI) ,
systemic review
Personal and social history, Family history
Physical examination (PE)
System based examination
#56 “Always listen to the patient they might be telling you the diagnosis”. Sir William Osler 1849 - 1919
#65 Reliability varies according to the patient’s memory, trust, and mood
#66 The CC or presenting complaint is the term used to describe the primary problem or condition of the patient prompting the clinician visit (reason for visit). Some prefer the more neutral term “chief concern.
The complain should be recorded with their onset duration
#68 Ask relevant associated symptoms
Gain as much information you can about the specific complaint.
Lead the conversation by asking questions.
Always start with an open ended question and take the time to listen to the patient’s ‘story’.
Once the patient has completed their narrative then closed questions can be asked to clarify .
Leading question are to be avoided.
#69 The seven attributes of a symptom
Location. Be specific; ask the person to point to the location. If the problem is pain, note the precise site. “Head pain” is vague, whereas descriptions such as “pain behind the eyes,” “jaw pain,” and “occipital pain” are more precise and diagnostically significant. Is the pain localized to one site or radiating? Is the pain superficial or deep?
2. Character or Quality. This calls for specific descriptive terms such as burning, sharp, dull, aching, gnawing, throbbing, shooting, viselike when describing pain. You also need to ask about the character of other symptoms. Use similes: Blood in the stool looks like sticky tarm whereas blood in vomitus looks like coffee grounds.
3. Quantity or Severity. Attempt to quantify the sign or symptom, such as “profuse menstrual flow soaking five pads per hour.” Quantify the symptom of pain using the scale shown on the right. With pain, avoid adjectives, and ask how it affects daily activities. Then record if
the person says, “I was so sick I was doubled over and couldn't move” or “I was able to go to work, but then I came home and went to bed.”
4. Timing (Onset, Duration, Frequency). When did the symptom first appear? Give the specific date and time or state specifically how long ago the symptom started prior to arrival (PTA). “The pain started yesterday” will not mean much when you return to read
the record in the future. The report must include answers to questions such as the “How long did the symptom last (duration)?” “Was it steady (constant) or did it come and go (intermittent)?” “Did it resolve completely and reappear days or weeks later (cycle of remission and exacerbation)?”
Mode of onset- acute, subacute or chronic or insidious.
Acute- within hours/abrupt, eg. Vascular lesion like AMI or stroke
Subacute - within days/weeks, to develop the full symptoms, e.g. infection/inflammation
Insidious- slow in onset, patient can’t remember the exact date of onset, e.g. neurodegenerative disease, neoplasms
#70 Setting. Where was the person or what was the person doing when the symptom started? What brings it on? For example, “Did you notice the chest pain after shoveling snow, or did the pain start by itself?”
6. Aggravating or Relieving Factors. Ask, “What have you tried?” or “What seems to help?”
7. Associated Factors. Is this primary symptom associated with any others (e.g., urinary frequency and burning associated with fever and chills)? Review the body system related to this symptom now rather than waiting for the Review of Systems section later. Many clinicians review the person's medication regimen now (including alcohol and tobacco use) because the presenting symptom may be a side effect or toxic effect of a chemical.
8. Patient's Perception. Find out the meaning of the symptom by asking how it affects daily activities (Fig. 4.3). “How has this affected you? Is there anything you can't do now that you could do before?” Also ask directly, “What do you think it means?” This is crucial because it alerts you to potential anxiety if the person thinks the symptom may be ominous
#71 Pertinent positives are “symptoms or signs that you would expect to find if a possible cause for a patient’s problem were true, which then supports this diagnosis.”7 For example, in a patient presenting with shortness of breath: “. . . The patient also had an episode of palpitations described as her ‘heart racing really fast’ for approximately less than a minute followed by intense facial flushing.”
You also note the absence of any symptoms related to your differential diagnosis, termed pertinent negatives. Pertinent negatives are “expected symptoms or signs that are not present, facts that you would expect to find if a possible cause for a patient’s problem were true, which then weaken this diagnosis by their absence.”7 In this same example regarding a patient with shortness of breath: “. . . There was no fever, cough with sputum production, chest pain, nausea or vomiting. He has no prior history of coronary artery disease or anxiety.” Historical information that may be possible causes of shortness of breath to consider in this example is lung infections (fever, cough with sputum production), heart attack (history of coronary artery disease, chest pain), and anxiety. The pertinent positives and especially the negatives clarify the possible causes of the patient’s condition as well as eliminate other less likely possibilities based on the patient’s story
#74 Opening Statement. This first statement should be the CC stated within the patient’s clinical context (e.g., critical historical elements most related to the CC that hints to possible causes of the patient’s condition).
For example: “JM is a 48-year-old male with poorly controlled diabetes mellitus presenting with 3 days of fever.” This example alerts the clinician that the fever may have some connection to the patient’s diabetes. It reminds the clinician to think of common possible causes of fever, most likely due to an infection, that typically happen in a patient with diabetes.
#75 ” Try to avoid common mistakes such as inconsistent time anchors: “On June 12, the patient started to develop . . . then 3 days prior to admission . . . then on Monday. . . .” Try to keep the time anchors consistent to make it easier to follow each event’s timeline
#78 Additional Pertinent Information. These two facts would typically be documented in the social history, but for these examples they are included in the HPI because they may have an impact on the evolving list of possible causes of the CC. Do not document these items twice. For example, for the patient who smokes in the example above, when you get to smoking in the social history, you can simply write “as per HPI” unless you are providing additional information.
#81 Medical: Ask about illnesses such as diabetes, high blood pressure, heart attack, hepatitis, asthma, and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), seizures, arthritis, tuberculosis, and cancer as well as time frame and hospitalizations.
Surgical: Ask dates and types of operations or procedures. If they are unable to recall the name of the operation or procedure, ask for the reason why it was performed (indication). Obstetric/Gynecologic: Ask about obstetric history, menstrual history, methods of contraception, and sexual function.
Psychiatric: Ask patient for any illnesses such as depression, anxiety, suicidal ideations/attempts; including time frame, diagnoses, hospitalizations, and treatments
#82 If pt. can’t remember written permission may be needed.
#83 The information gathered from the PMH is typically documented under separate headings: Past Medical History (which includes child and adult illnesses), Past Surgical History, Obstetrics and Gynecologic History, and Psychiatric History.
Gravida (G)—Number of pregnancies; Parity (P)—Number of deliveries (term, preterm, abortions [spontaneous abortions and terminated pregnancies], and living children);
#84 immediate relative including parents, grandparents, siblings, children, and grandchildren.
Ask about any history of breast, ovarian, colon, or prostate cancer.
#90 The Review of Systems questions may uncover problems or symptoms that you or the patient may have overlooked, particularly in areas unrelated to the HPI.
This is an inquiry method called scanning, in which you ask patients questions regarding dysfunctions in different organ systems.
These “yes-no” questions should come at the end of the interview
Note that you will vary the need for additional questions depending on the patient’s age, complaints, general state of health, and your clinical judgment.
The Review of Systems questions may uncover problems that the patient has overlooked, particularly in areas unrelated to the present illness.
Major health events should be moved to the present illness or past history in your write-up.
Keep your technique flexible.
#96
Genital-
Female-
Age at menarche; regularity, frequency, and duration of periods; amount of bleeding, bleeding between periods or after intercourse, LMP; dysmenorrhea , premenstrual tension; age at menopause, menopausal symptoms, postmenopausal bleeding.
Vaginal discharge, itching, sores, lumps, STDs and Rxs.
Number of pregnancies, number and type of deliveries, number of abortions (spontaneous and induced); complications of pregnancy; birth control methods. Sexual preference, interest, function, satisfaction, any problems, including dyspareunia. Exposure to HIV infection.