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This concise medical reference is designed to help medical students, doctors, nurses and physician's associates apply best practice to the taking of effective medical histories. It provides informative but succinct guidance for clinical professionals on how to capture and interpret a medical history from their patients. The approach presented is new and innovative, and based on expert medical opinion and in depth research with senior clinical leads from multiple medical and surgical specialities from the UK's leading virtual hospital. The Concise Guide to Medical History Taking makes use of the development of new patient-focussed medical history tools, where the essential elements of clinical history taking have been refined and improved in order to develop a meaningful and relevant way of taking a clinical history whilst avoiding much of the traditional filler content that is taught traditionally. The question sets are now more user friendly, discriminating and linked to the underlying set of differential diagnoses. This reflects an updated approach to clinical history taking, seeking tangible benefits, based on the evidence of what has been found to be most useful in real world clinical practice. With a foreword by Dr Richard Chudleigh, Consultant Physician & Diabetologist, Singleton Hospital, Associate Professor, Swansea University Medical School
List of contents
Introduction & background history taking.- The cardiac system.- The respiratory system.- The gastroenterology system.- The endocrine system.- Dermatology.- The haematological system.- The renal & urological system.- Taking a gynaecological & sexual history.- The ophthalmological system.- The rheumatological system.- Ear, nose and throat.- A psychiatric history.- Taking a family history.- What s relevant in the social history.
About the author
Dr Paul Grant is a clinician by background, having worked in the UK NHS as a Consultant Physician and Clinical Director for many years. He has most recently been working in the field of digital health and is currently the Director of Medical Informatics & Innovation at Medefer, (the UK’s only CQC registered virtual hospital). He is an established medical writer and author, having previously written ‘The Gestational Diabetes Survival Guide’ (Sheldon Press 2016) and is the former editor-in-chief of both the British Journal of Diabetes and Clinical Medicine.
Summary
This concise medical reference is designed to help medical students, doctors, nurses and physician's associates apply best practice to the taking of effective medical histories. It provides informative but succinct guidance for clinical professionals on how to capture and interpret a medical history from their patients. The approach presented is new and innovative, and based on expert medical opinion and in depth research with senior clinical leads from multiple medical and surgical specialities from the UK's leading virtual hospital.
The Concise Guide to Medical History Taking makes use of the development of new patient-focussed medical history tools, where the essential elements of clinical history taking have been refined and improved in order to develop a meaningful and relevant way of taking a clinical history whilst avoiding much of the traditional filler content that is taught traditionally. The question sets are now more user friendly, discriminating and linked to the underlying set of differential diagnoses. This reflects an updated approach to clinical history taking, seeking tangible benefits, based on the evidence of what has been found to be most useful in real world clinical practice.
With a foreword by Dr Richard Chudleigh, Consultant Physician & Diabetologist, Singleton Hospital, Associate Professor, Swansea University Medical School