A Medical H&P - Example 1

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  • Опубліковано 5 тра 2024
  • An example of an oral presentation of a medical H&P, with two levels of detail: A thorough 7-10 minute presentation that would be typical of a clerkship medical student, and a more to-the-point 3-5 minute presentation that would be typical of an experienced resident (or an intern on a busy service that doesn't have time for the "complete" H&P)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 12

  • @omidahomi712
    @omidahomi712 Місяць тому

    Thanks Dr. Strong. This is excellent for me entering clerkships soon. Keep em coming!

  • @heminhimdad
    @heminhimdad Місяць тому

    Amazing video as usual, thanks so much ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @yasminyouyuo
    @yasminyouyuo 20 днів тому

    Thank you Doctor ❤❤ I got excited seeing a new video from u

  • @TheoneandonlyRAH
    @TheoneandonlyRAH 29 днів тому

    love this doc. tyvm

  • @GDSchaefer
    @GDSchaefer Місяць тому +2

    Thanks for making all of these videos, I find them very informative even if the info often frequently beyond my EMT scope of practice. Would you be able to make a video discussing what the best EMS handoff report (both for trauma and sick IFT pts) practices are? What info an ER doc would want and how to best organize the information? I would be very interested in hearing what the people GETTING the report want to actually hear.

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Місяць тому +3

      Thanks for watching! I'm sorry, but I don't work in the ED and am never in the position to take signout from an EMT. It's a great question, but I wouldn't be the best person to answer it.

    • @juliachambers725
      @juliachambers725 23 дні тому

      I do listen EMT giving report on the intercom sometimes and 60 percent of the time it’s choppy and leave ED stuff puzzled as to what happened what is the complain what’s done and set of vitals presence of IV. I’d say talk to every doctor in ED you see (ask what you did right what to do next time, etc). They want you to do your best as well.

  • @hudakhelef5677
    @hudakhelef5677 Місяць тому

    Wow thank u ❤

  • @warbler1984
    @warbler1984 Місяць тому +3

    Great video but I would say that a busy intern would not present a case in 5 minutes in any practice that ive seen...a bust service would be far shorter

    • @StrongMed
      @StrongMed  Місяць тому +8

      Thanks for the comment. I think it depends on the situation. If I'm rounding with the team and there's a new patient I've already seen myself or for whom I've reviewed their chart (the majority of patients for me), then I will usually tell the intern to give me a "SOAP style" presentation (as opposed to an abbreviated "H&P style" presentation). But if I'm coming into rounds knowing nothing about the patient, a presentation shorter than the 3-5 min range is too short to convey enough info to judge the assessment and plan.
      Are there hospitalists who truly want a presentation in the format of an H&P but delivered in 2 minutes? Yes, I know some who do. But I also think it's a mistake. If rounds are using the presentation as a communication tool, it's not enough time to communicate sufficient info, and other team members will need to read through the chart later anyway. And if rounds are using the presentation as a tool to assess the learner's clinical reasoning, it risks reinforcing behavior in which too little information is incorporated into the reasoning process. For example, if the attending never wants to hear the social history, it implies the social history isn't important. Over time, the learner will excessively deemphasize components of the social history in their reasoning process, or will stop asking about it altogether. I can't count the number of times I've asked an intern what a patient does for a living, where they live, or who they live with only to discover the intern has no idea.

    • @warbler1984
      @warbler1984 29 днів тому

      ​@StrongMed thanks for the reply.
      I think you're so right about the social history and how it trains you not to include it but forgetting it leads to all sorts of disposition problems. I certainly wish these videos were here when I was a student!

  • @dg12344
    @dg12344 28 днів тому

    I would spend more time in excluding DDs for progressive exertional dyspnea and peripheral oedema. "She reports no orthopnea,PND or associated exertional chest pain.She also reports no reduction in UOP/frothy urine,no yellowish discoloration of eyes and no overt bleeding manifestations.She also has no long term cough or wheezing.'
    Doesn't take a lot of time to say that.