Interviewing Flashcards

1
Q

Sinss

A

Severity: On a scale of 1-10 how bad is your pain? One being a bee sting and 10 being run over. What kind of pain is it?

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2
Q

sInss

A

Irritability: How easily is the pain provoked? What makes it worse? What relieves it? How long does it hurt when it is provoked?

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3
Q

siNss

A

Nature: Is it a bone, ligament, muscle? What am I worried about? Who am I treating? Is there a psychological component?

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4
Q

sinSs

A

Stage: When did it start? Is it acute or chronic?

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5
Q

sinsS

A

Stability: Is it getting worse? Is it getting better? Is it up and down? Progression of symptoms.

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6
Q

What are the components of active listening?

A

Non-selective: take it all in to understand the whole picture.
Then ask them questions to elaborate.
Make sure you are not distracted.
Use common language.

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7
Q

What object is an interview like?

A

It is like a funnel with strands coming off of it. Start big and funnel it down smaller.

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8
Q

What are components of non-verbal communication?

A

Stay in the safe space of 1-3 feet.
Only touch them after you ask for permission.
Lean forward slightly to listen.
Be at eye level.
Eye contact, but don’t stare.
Be aware of your facial expressions and what your body language is conveying.

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9
Q

Explain a narrowly biomedical interview

A

Closed ended questions that are focused solely on the pathology

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10
Q

Explain expanded biomedical

A

Biomedical but includes some psychosocial questions

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11
Q

Explain bio-psychosocial

A

Broad view interview. It includes bio, psych, and social factors

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12
Q

Explain psychosocial

A

Psychosocial questions

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13
Q

Explain consumerist

A

Patient asks questions and the provider gives info

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14
Q

Is there a type of interview that takes more time than the others?

A

No. They all take about the same amount of time.

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15
Q

What interview has the highest patient satisfaction?

A

Patient centered interviews have the highest satisfaction. It makes the patient feel valued and heard. “To know what kind of person has a disease is as essential as to know what kind of disease a person has.”

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16
Q

If someone is in too much pain to talk to you, what should you do?

A

Ask them if there is anything that we can do right now to make them more comfortable.

17
Q

How should you handle asking clarification from a patient?

A
  1. Take responsibility for not understanding or not asking a question well.
  2. Summarize what you heard to make sure it is correct.
  3. Ask the patient to give an example.
  4. Each question should have a purpose.
18
Q

What are the components of patient-centered interviews?

A
  1. Presenting complaint and its affects. What is this preventing my patient from doing? What are they concerned about?
  2. Who am I treating? What does my patient value? Who are they as a person.
  3. Finding common ground. Try to connect and establish rapport.
  4. Promote health and prevention whenever you can.
  5. Enhance the patient therapist relationship
  6. Set realistic expectations. Don’t tell them what to expect. Just tell them where they are.
19
Q

Why is it bad to categorize individuals too quickly?

A

Consider groups but treat individuals. There are common pathologies, but you might miss something about an individual if you categorize them too quickly. Your patient may not fit into the category.

20
Q

Why is it important to interview well?

A
  1. History is 80% of diagnostic challenge. It can tell you a lot about a patient, but it may not tell you everything.
  2. Usually a combination of forms and interview
  3. Establish rapport with the patient
  4. Determine their learning style, so you can be effective when you give them home exercise programs
  5. Establish and agree on goals