Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient, contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
We use the acronym OLDCARTS for the HPI. Onset, Location, Duration, Character, Aggravating factors, Relieving factors, Timing, Severity. Usually works with most complaints!
This is one of the best history taking guides I’ve seen! I’m a first year medical student and I needed this for my mock patient interviews and history taking skills, thank you so much!
@@loveyourmindalittle Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient, contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
I’m not a med student so I can’t relate to this but the next time I’m at the doctors for something major I’ll see if they actually do take my history this way
Hi Nasir……thanks so much for the video, I currently graduated from medical school right now I am a doctor in Nigeria, it’s amazing to see how similar taking patient history are following the same pattern with slight difference….. appreciate your video.
Those in-depth questions are usually asked in the specialist department, but most of the GP I have been visiting are asking a few questions, e.g. what are your medication in the past weeks? how do you feel now after taking those? what is your medical concern now? I'm glad to learn a lot from the way KIng College Medicine has taught you along when you are practising your medical knowledge by sharing with us. Thanks.
As a fellow medical student I think you have covered every single step to the depth. In my opinion better aproach would have been if you had a friend to play a patient and explain everything during the interview, altho as this isnt strictly video for future doctors it is more than enough to understand the concept of taking history. Great work man , keep it up!
If there are any visitors asking the patient if they are comfortable with them being in the room during this is verry important. I would say the perfect moment for that is after the introduction (3:40 min mark).
Every time i watch this videos… the only thing I can say to myself is… you should have given science a chance two years back … but what’s done is done… I try to get motivated and do my best in what I chose and what I’m doing right now… and @kharmamedic u r my study with me buddy ❤️😌
Well, this video is showing me how complicated the base parts of practicing medicine for are. But I am here for the ride, and dream of going to medical school, even though I am not even I'm high school yet.
"Hi, my name is Nasir and I am now a final-year medical student studying at King's College London." Such a distinguished intro!🤩🤩👍👍 Excellent video!🌟💯 Thank you for making this! It's extremely useful for everybody, not just for future doctors! Once, when I was at the ER because of a severe kidney inflammation, I was lying on the gurney, half-dead and writhing in pain, when all of a sudden a completely baffled med student was sent "to my aid". The poor creature was supposed to take my medical history - and she just stared at me, clutching to a piece of paper and a pen, not knowing what to ask, let alone what to do. I had to proceed by reporting my medical history myself and I think I did quite well, since the supervising doctor (when he finally arrived) had no further questions for me. But this video is such an awesome guideline for such situations! 💯🌟👍Thank you for this! I've made notes from your video and I'm going to keep them in my bag for future reference! 👍😀
As a medical student this was incredibly helpful, thank you very much for this amazing content. I would love to see more of this clinically oriented content now, specially because that’s primarily what you do as a final year student.
Doctors are a blessing for mankind. Good doctors are really huge blessings. I just underwent surgery and can't thank my surgeon and anesthesiologist enough not only for saving my life but also for being so kind and caring for me through such a sensitive period of my life. Dr Nasir (you're almost a doctor!), keep up the good work, and don't ever leave your empathy for your patients. That's really important. Guaranteed, you'll meet some asshole patients, but please forgive them and move on. Also, please don't leave this profession for something more attractive (no disrespect to Ali Abdal, he's great!), but my request to you would be to please please please never leave this line of work. All the very best to you. Keep making more videos I'm not a doctor, but your videos are very helpful either way.
This is so helpful to review as a first year med student! It's interesting that y'all in the UK use "SOCRATES" as your acronym - I've never heard that before! Here in the US we use either "OLDCARTS" or more recently "OPQRST". Super cool video and would love to see more videos like this as you transition into full time clinical! 😇
Very concise and helpful - thank you! I have my first sim patient encounter this coming week and this video has given me a better idea of how to approach the patient.
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient, contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
As a mere patient consuming this kind of content, it’s amazing to me how astute medical personnel can sometimes be. First you have to remember just HOW to collect the information, and then you have to retain it long enough to capture it to the patient’s medical record. However, with the last doctor I had a consultation with, I feel like he should have read my rights first. Many things I disclosed I thought were only going to remain as verbal conversations. No! He transcribed EVERYTHING, even the most superfluous things. I’m never gonna be that open again. Sheesh.
I'm an ESL teacher with a personal interest in health and medicine, who has also done some interpretation for American medical professionals doing clinics in interior Amazon villages. I came across this video looking for some great ways to teach my ESL students about taking history to prepare them for things I didn't think to prepare them for before they were called to do interpretation for this trip. So I'm preparing a lesson on genitourinary complaints to add to my curriculum, and in that lesson, I'll combine it with learning how to take a history, so that they get the vocabulary I didn't teach them. I was not expecting to find so many genitourinary complaints, but I was always getting called over by my embarrassed students to interpret. So the next students are going to get it, and who cares if they're embarrassed. They'll get over it and become fine interpretors. Thanks for such a great and concise video.
I am a long term patient and hv elderly parents. Thank you, it will save my reliance on physicians. And they (the physicians of my country) wont be able to say, "oh, there was a long queue. So mistake is supposed to happen. Sorry, I left the bandage inside (the body)." Thank you. This should be included in 7th class biology instead of low-use mangifera indica, pyrus malus etc.
I think this is the best video of the channel hahaha I wish all med students could see it. Thanks for it Nasir, it’s really really great! (+ I loved the digging part)
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient, contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
Two more videos ( vlog ) to go for a million subs btw congrats for million subscribers in advance since i m following your channel since 21 months every video of your added some value in my life thanks for your videos Your well-wisher 🇮🇳🇮🇳
I don’t know why i am watching this video 😂, i am 14 years old and i wish to study medicine and become a great doctor its only 3 years to Graduate and go to uni 👨🏻⚕️🤍🥺 one day i will make my dream true 🤍.
Hi!!! I'm a 3rd years medical student in Taiwan. and just learning how to check the English history record, I'm such your huge fan since your first what's in my bag video. Watching your video always makes me feel inspired and useful.
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient, contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
I found this video incredibly useful and insightful, thank you so much for taking the time to share this with us. I will definitely incorporate what I have learnt here, when hopefully taking patient histories in the future! 👍🙌👏
Hi Nasir, great video once again. You’ve packed all the info King’s spreads out into an easy to digest format. One question I had for you as I’m only a newbie 2nd year is how do you write down all the information they say to you to present later on. I feel I either forget to ask the right questions when I’m writing stuff down or forget to write down vital details when focussed on questioning them well. Thanks
Later in your studies, you'll find out that you remember all the stuff patient told you much more easily (or you write down just sth odd, surprising or when there's just too much information - for example number of surgeries and year they were perfomed). But it is really important to have this outline (as Nasir perfectly described in this video) because you'll present it better to tutors.
I've worked with so many consultants who thought they were far too important to waste time actually being nice to people so it's very nice to hear someone talk about the importance of treating people like humans - and often humans who are in an unenviable situation.
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient, contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
Hey Nasirrrr, Can’t wait for you to reach 1 million subscribers 💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻 This video was so helpful. Please can you make videos on Physical and systemic Examinations?
Can you put subtitles in all languages for these videos 🙏🏻 Oh my God, the videos of this channel are very useful. Thank you very much 💐. I wish you success 💝
Technically I'm here to escape med school and internship life 😂 now you betrayed me with this video I didn't watch it all though! I know your content is changing and stuff but please don't bombard us a lot with these 🥺 good luck with your new journey
Even though I'm not even a med student yet, it felt good to watch this as sb who is trying to get accepted in med school 🥰
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient,
contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
LOL same here
We use the acronym OLDCARTS for the HPI. Onset, Location, Duration, Character, Aggravating factors, Relieving factors, Timing, Severity. Usually works with most complaints!
It lacks"radiation"
I’m currently applying to medical school so videos like this always get me so excited for what’s to come. Thanks for the video 🙏🏽💜
From usa?
This is one of the best history taking guides I’ve seen! I’m a first year medical student and I needed this for my mock patient interviews and history taking skills, thank you so much!
Doctors reveal the heart of humanity - the need of support and healing in illness and the supply of it - so fine
So this way history taking is pretty universal and we follow the same and you just made it so crisp and concise!!
I agree, I am mental health clinician trainee. I follow similar pattern.
Do you take notes while in the session?
@@loveyourmindalittle Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient,
contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
I’m not a med student so I can’t relate to this but the next time I’m at the doctors for something major I’ll see if they actually do take my history this way
Hi Nasir……thanks so much for the video, I currently graduated from medical school right now I am a doctor in Nigeria, it’s amazing to see how similar taking patient history are following the same pattern with slight difference….. appreciate your video.
Those in-depth questions are usually asked in the specialist department, but most of the GP I have been visiting are asking a few questions, e.g. what are your medication in the past weeks? how do you feel now after taking those? what is your medical concern now? I'm glad to learn a lot from the way KIng College Medicine has taught you along when you are practising your medical knowledge by sharing with us. Thanks.
As a fellow medical student I think you have covered every single step to the depth. In my opinion better aproach would have been if you had a friend to play a patient and explain everything during the interview, altho as this isnt strictly video for future doctors it is more than enough to understand the concept of taking history. Great work man , keep it up!
💖💖💗💗💗🤗🤗
Last year I watched ur videos and I was at grade 12 , now l 'm a student in Faculty of medicine ♥️
الحمدلله ♥️♥️♥️
Barokallahu feeh. How is medical school treating you?
you've motivated me to push through throughout this year
If there are any visitors asking the patient if they are comfortable with them being in the room during this is verry important. I would say the perfect moment for that is after the introduction (3:40 min mark).
I've started internal medicine this semester and this video was very nice to watch 😂❤️
Every time i watch this videos… the only thing I can say to myself is… you should have given science a chance two years back … but what’s done is done… I try to get motivated and do my best in what I chose and what I’m doing right now… and @kharmamedic u r my study with me buddy ❤️😌
Well, this video is showing me how complicated the base parts of practicing medicine for are. But I am here for the ride, and dream of going to medical school, even though I am not even I'm high school yet.
Going to save it in my phone. History taking is almost same all over the world. Thanks for a comprehensive video. Love from 🇮🇳
"Hi, my name is Nasir and I am now a final-year medical student studying at King's College London." Such a distinguished intro!🤩🤩👍👍
Excellent video!🌟💯 Thank you for making this! It's extremely useful for everybody, not just for future doctors! Once, when I was at the ER because of a severe kidney inflammation, I was lying on the gurney, half-dead and writhing in pain, when all of a sudden a completely baffled med student was sent "to my aid". The poor creature was supposed to take my medical history - and she just stared at me, clutching to a piece of paper and a pen, not knowing what to ask, let alone what to do. I had to proceed by reporting my medical history myself and I think I did quite well, since the supervising doctor (when he finally arrived) had no further questions for me. But this video is such an awesome guideline for such situations! 💯🌟👍Thank you for this! I've made notes from your video and I'm going to keep them in my bag for future reference! 👍😀
As a medical student this was incredibly helpful, thank you very much for this amazing content. I would love to see more of this clinically oriented content now, specially because that’s primarily what you do as a final year student.
Doctors are a blessing for mankind. Good doctors are really huge blessings. I just underwent surgery and can't thank my surgeon and anesthesiologist enough not only for saving my life but also for being so kind and caring for me through such a sensitive period of my life. Dr Nasir (you're almost a doctor!), keep up the good work, and don't ever leave your empathy for your patients. That's really important. Guaranteed, you'll meet some asshole patients, but please forgive them and move on. Also, please don't leave this profession for something more attractive (no disrespect to Ali Abdal, he's great!), but my request to you would be to please please please never leave this line of work. All the very best to you. Keep making more videos I'm not a doctor, but your videos are very helpful either way.
Don’t understand a thing he is saying because I am an engineering major but still watching the entire video because it is so satisfying! 😭😅
This is so helpful to review as a first year med student! It's interesting that y'all in the UK use "SOCRATES" as your acronym - I've never heard that before! Here in the US we use either "OLDCARTS" or more recently "OPQRST". Super cool video and would love to see more videos like this as you transition into full time clinical! 😇
Here in my country we use SOCRATES as well 😄
Very concise and helpful - thank you! I have my first sim patient encounter this coming week and this video has given me a better idea of how to approach the patient.
Thank you so much! This helps a lot! I like this new type of content, keep it up!
The day after tomorrow a need to do a test about this video. You helped me getting motivated this year. Thank you so much!
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient,
contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
Thank you. I dont hv formal education. Medical reasons!!! UA-cam has taught my language skills. Now you are teaching me more life skills. Thank you.
I thought, I got a like! But cant find it now. 🤔
Nice, I’m a 2nd year nursing student from NZ and this helped me out a lot on placement. Thanks bro!
As a mere patient consuming this kind of content, it’s amazing to me how astute medical personnel can sometimes be.
First you have to remember just HOW to collect the information, and then you have to retain it long enough to capture it to the patient’s medical record.
However, with the last doctor I had a consultation with, I feel like he should have read my rights first. Many things I disclosed I thought were only going to remain as verbal conversations. No! He transcribed EVERYTHING, even the most superfluous things.
I’m never gonna be that open again. Sheesh.
I needed this guide so much
I am going to 3rd year, this process i find very hard.
Not me just doing a cbl class on patient interviewing 😯. Thank you Nasir
This video comes at the perfect time!! I’m in my first year in medical school and we’re just starting to learn history taking. Thanks for the vid!
I'm an ESL teacher with a personal interest in health and medicine, who has also done some interpretation for American medical professionals doing clinics in interior Amazon villages. I came across this video looking for some great ways to teach my ESL students about taking history to prepare them for things I didn't think to prepare them for before they were called to do interpretation for this trip. So I'm preparing a lesson on genitourinary complaints to add to my curriculum, and in that lesson, I'll combine it with learning how to take a history, so that they get the vocabulary I didn't teach them. I was not expecting to find so many genitourinary complaints, but I was always getting called over by my embarrassed students to interpret. So the next students are going to get it, and who cares if they're embarrassed. They'll get over it and become fine interpretors. Thanks for such a great and concise video.
I am a long term patient and hv elderly parents. Thank you, it will save my reliance on physicians. And they (the physicians of my country) wont be able to say, "oh, there was a long queue. So mistake is supposed to happen. Sorry, I left the bandage inside (the body)." Thank you. This should be included in 7th class biology instead of low-use mangifera indica, pyrus malus etc.
I think this is the best video of the channel hahaha I wish all med students could see it. Thanks for it Nasir, it’s really really great! (+ I loved the digging part)
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient,
contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
The Visual Comedy has been augmented on the channel is always a delight to see.
I want medical school vlogs for. Motivation
If you want inspiring words just don't do it: Elon musk
@@awaiswait6942 elon must respect
New one is coming soon
Two more videos ( vlog ) to go for a million subs btw congrats for million subscribers in advance since i m following your channel since 21 months every video of your added some value in my life thanks for your videos
Your well-wisher 🇮🇳🇮🇳
I don’t know why i am watching this video 😂, i am 14 years old and i wish to study medicine and become a great doctor its only 3 years to Graduate and go to uni 👨🏻⚕️🤍🥺 one day i will make my dream true 🤍.
@@annoynmous1 i will 🤍🤍
You will doc 👨⚕️
@@aliusamaasif thanks 😭🤍
Keep it up bro. You are way ahead of too many people. I am a medical student too❤️
Thanks, this video is really helpful for me
Hi!!! I'm a 3rd years medical student in Taiwan. and just learning how to check the English history record, I'm such your huge fan since your first what's in my bag video. Watching your video always makes me feel inspired and useful.
The king is back.
Not a medical student but parts of this are still applicable to my field (psychology).
Very helpful video. I am an MFT trainee and I really like the idea of being fluid.
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient,
contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
I’ve heard about this topic so much on Nasir and Ali’s channel that this is a video we were curious about.
Even though I'm in the 6th Grade you have been my idol and my influence to become a doctor. Honestly love your content, Stay Safe
Thank you so much for helping me at the right time❤❤❤
Now I know why Medical Dramas are a thing. The History taking is so capricious that makes for great drama.
I m a Dr but I m so much impressed 👍🏻 from Ur polite nature ❤ so I subscribed u 🎉 Allah give u hidaya bro ameen 🤲💝
Oh no too late, literally needed this last quarter for bio. I scoured the net and yt to search for this. I just used the guides in the google images
I'm currently applying to medical school so video like this always get me so exicted for whats come thanks for the Video 😊❤
I found this video incredibly useful and insightful, thank you so much for taking the time to share this with us. I will definitely incorporate what I have learnt here, when hopefully taking patient histories in the future! 👍🙌👏
I love this subject! Please do more about medical themes 👩⚕️
thank you nassir that was very helpful ! " fourth year med student from algeria "
Thank you for this - really helped me as an SLT student!
such a timely video considering i have my osce tomorrow
I hope he does things like this when he's a doctor. I'd rather have another (better) Dr Mike than an Ali abdaal
Omgosh thankyouu so much😭 i needed this!!
Extremely useful, thanks a lot!
This is such a good video , mate!
It always feels great to be early to a video.
Hi Nasir, great video once again. You’ve packed all the info King’s spreads out into an easy to digest format. One question I had for you as I’m only a newbie 2nd year is how do you write down all the information they say to you to present later on. I feel I either forget to ask the right questions when I’m writing stuff down or forget to write down vital details when focussed on questioning them well. Thanks
Write out your format first, then fill in as they speak. Make your format the order than you'll present it to the Dr. Hope it helps
@@DiLLZGFX Thanks. That’s what I’ve been doing so far, I’ve got the template but it’s kinda difficult to keep up with the conversation I find
Later in your studies, you'll find out that you remember all the stuff patient told you much more easily (or you write down just sth odd, surprising or when there's just too much information - for example number of surgeries and year they were perfomed). But it is really important to have this outline (as Nasir perfectly described in this video) because you'll present it better to tutors.
@@alenahruzova3178 thank you
for the algorithm. keep up the good videos mate.
I've worked with so many consultants who thought they were far too important to waste time actually being nice to people so it's very nice to hear someone talk about the importance of treating people like humans - and often humans who are in an unenviable situation.
Love the vids
continue
I am 15 and do not plan to study medicine. I will still religiously sit through a long video about taking patient histories because it’s Nasir :).
Absolutely love this content!
Thank you! I'll surely follow all these tips
Just what I neeeeded!!!!!!!!!
Nasir Kharma you legend man
Yesss give us more of this i need help!!!!
though you explained everything really nicely and it’s clear to me, i cannot help myself from staring at you. you’re too handsome
As a medic student it was so helpful,,,,I would ask if you can do videos on nursing theories
Very helpful! Thank you!
So are you coming back to Canada to work as a doctor?
I'm a clinical medicine student and have experience my first year learning
يا ريت فيديوهاتك تكون مترجمه باللغه العربيه لاستفاده اكتر ♥️
This is simply brilliant!
Masha Allah good advice .am not a medical students bt wen i finish my sec i will join medical.
Excellent explained Kharma. Thank you : )
Great video as always 🤣
Giving thanks to Doctor Ani John is something I will always take personal because he brought me back to my full health he is a good man and trustworthy so kind to every patient,
contact Dr.Ani John on UA-cam channel now for help for kind of health issues
Hey Nasirrrr, Can’t wait for you to reach 1 million subscribers 💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻 This video was so helpful. Please can you make videos on Physical and systemic Examinations?
thnq so much next time can you do the Examination please
Awesome thanks for this useful video !! 🙏🏽🙏🏽
Simply fantastic.Thanks a lot.
nice presentation, i have really learned a lot from the video
So strong Dr Naser 💪🏻💪🏻🤩🤩🤩🤩
Really helpful
JazakAllah khair
I am amedical student thanks for your video!!!!❤❤❤❤
Can you put subtitles in all languages for these videos 🙏🏻
Oh my God, the videos of this channel are very useful.
Thank you very much 💐. I wish you success 💝
UK has got a good doctor :) lucky them
Thats great
Very helpful video seriously 🙏😁
thank you so much i find this video useful
love this
Awesome!
Saludos desde México 🇲🇽❤
Amazing
Great video, as usual.
Great Video ❤️❤️❤️
Technically I'm here to escape med school and internship life 😂 now you betrayed me with this video I didn't watch it all though! I know your content is changing and stuff but please don't bombard us a lot with these 🥺 good luck with your new journey
Please make a video on how to prepare for osces