Interviewing and The Health History
Interviewing and The Health History
HEALTH HISTORY
THE FORMAT OF THE
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH HISTORY
THE SEQUENCE OF THE INTERVIEW
EXPANDING AND CLARIFYING THE
HEALTH HISTORY (PATIENT’S
PERSPECTIVE)
• We must guide the patient into elaborating areas of the health history that
seem most significant.
EXPLORING THE PATIENT’S
PERSPECTIVE
FACILITATING THE PATIENT’S STORY:
THE TECHNIQUES OF SKILLED
INTERVIEWING
THE TECHNIQUES OF SKILLED
INTERVIEWING
Active listening
Patient: Yes, it was just like the pain my father had when he had his
heart attack, and I was afraid the same thing was happening to me.
THE TECHNIQUES OF SKILLED
INTERVIEWING
Empathic Response
- To empathize with your patient you must first identify his or her
feelings.
Validation
Reassurance:
Example:
“Now, let me make sure that I have the full story. You said you’ve had a cough
for 3 days, it’s especially bad at night, and you have started to bring up yellow
phlegm. You have not had a fever or felt short of breath, but you do feel
congested, with difficulty breathing through your nose.”
Example:
“Now I’d like to ask some questions about your past health.”
“Now I’d like to examine you. I’ll step out for a few minutes. Please get completely undressed
and put on this gown.”
ADAPTING INTERVIEWING TECHNIQUES
TO SPECIFIC SITUATIONS
- The Silent Patient
-
SPECIAL ASPECTS OF INTERVIEWING
“Now I’d like to ask you some questions about your sexual health and practices.”
“When was the last time you had intimate physical contact with anyone?”
“Did that contact include sexual intercourse?”
“Do you have sex with men, women, or both?”
“How many sexual partners have you had in the last 6 months?”
“In the last 5 years?”
“In your lifetime?”
SPECIAL ASPECTS OF INTERVIEWING
Domestic and Physical Violence
- “Because abuse is common in many women’s lives, I’ve begun to ask about it routinely.”
- “Are there times in your relation- ships that you feel unsafe or afraid?”
2. Anger
3. Bargaining
4. Depression or sadness
5. Acceptance
SPECIAL ASPECTS OF INTERVIEWING
Sexuality in the Clinician–Patient Relationship.
- Clinicians occasionally find themselves physically attracted to their patients
- If you become aware of such feelings, accept them as a normal human response and
bring them to the conscious level so they will not affect your behavior.
- Denying these feelings makes it more likely for you to act inappropriately.
- Any sexual contact or romantic relationship with patients is unethical; keep your
relationship with the patient within professional bounds and seek help if you need it.
ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Nonmaleficence or primum non nocere
Beneficence is the dictum that the clinician needs to “do good” for the patient. As
clinicians, our actions need to be motivated by what is in the patient’s best interest.
Autonomy reminds us that patients have the right to determine what is in their own best
interest. This principle has become increasingly important over time and is consistent with
collaborative rather than paternalistic patient relationships.
- Establishing Rapport:
- “Now, are you Jimmy’s grandmother?”
- “Please help me by telling me Jimmy’s relationship to everyone
here”
Adolescents, like most other people, usually respond positively to anyone who
demonstrates a genuine interest in them.
Remember also that adolescents’ behavior is related to their developmental stage and
not necessarily to chronologic age or physical maturation. Their age and appearance
may fool you into assuming that they are functioning on a more future-oriented and
realistic level.
TALKING WITH ADOLESCENTS
At the other end of the life cycle, aging patients also have special needs
and concerns. Their hearing and vision may be impaired, their responses
and explanations may be slow or lengthy, and they may have chronic
illnesses with associated disabilities.
Elderly people may not report their symptoms. Some may be afraid or
embarrassed; others may be try- ing to avoid the medical expenses or
the discomforts of diagnosis and treat- ment. They may think their
symptoms are merely part of aging, or they may simply have forgotten
about them. They may be inhibited by fears of losing their
independence.
TALKING WITH AGING PATIENTS
Functional Assessment.
- Learning how the elderly, and those with chronic illness, function in
terms of daily activities is essential and provides a baseline for future
comparisons. There are two standard categories of assessment:
physical activities of daily living (ADLs) and instrumental activities of
daily living (IADLs).
TALKING WITH AGING PATEINTS
THE END