Year 4 H&S Flashcards

1
Q

Social & medicolegal implications of epilepsy (4)

A
  1. Driving & Employment Barriers (legal requirement to inform DVLA after 1 seizure. Cannot drive until 6 months seizure-free)
  2. . Social participation (e.g. photosensitive events)
  3. *Pregnancy *- teratogenic meds (Sodium Valproate) & providing care for baby. Note AEDs safe generally in breast-feedig.
  4. Mental health depression & stigma
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2
Q

Preventing spread of meningococcal disease (3)

A
  1. Post-exposure prophylaxis (Ciprofloxacin) to close contacts in 7 days prior to onset
  2. Public Health notification
  3. Chidhood vaccination
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3
Q

Define euthanasia, assisted suicide and “doctrine of double effect”

A

Euthanasia: deliberately ending someone’s life to to relive suffering
Assisted suicide: assisting someone to end their own life
Doctrine of Double Effect: for example giving a patient a drug to improve symptoms which inadvertedly shortens their life (not deemed immoral, not illegal and doesn’t count as euthanasia)

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4
Q

Distinguish palliative care and end-of-life care

A

Palliative: relief of a symptom/problem relating to illness without intention to cure or prolong life. Can be delivered alongside disease-directed therapy and can be started at any point in the disease process.
EoL care of paitents in the last year of their life (variable)

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5
Q

List 3 tools used to identify patients at EoL and how are they categorised?

A

SPICT, GSF-PIG, RADPAC. People at EoL are categorised 5 ways:
* 1. Advanced/incurable/progressive condition
* 2. General frailty + co-existing conditions
* 3. Chronic condition - at risk of dying from acute illness
* 4. Life-threatening acute condition

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6
Q

Define frailty

A

Distinctive health state related to the aging process where multiple body systems gradually loose their built-in reserves

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7
Q

List 3-4 ways of measuring frailty

A
  1. Phenotype Model (Fried) - >3 patient characteristics is predictive of frailty
  2. Rockwood Clinical Frailty Score - clinical score from 1-8
  3. Rockwood Cumulative Deficit Model - number of deficits accumulated / time = frailty index
  4. Electronic Frailty Index (for GPs)
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8
Q

What simple assessments could you do during a consultation to quickly assess frailty? (2 physical, 1 patient self-questionnaire)

A
  1. Gait speed (>5 sec to cover 4 metres)
  2. TUGT (>10 sec to get up, walk 3 metres, sit down)
  3. PRISMA 7 (>3 reqs review)
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9
Q

List the 4 “frailty syndromes” (geriatric giants) - aka categories of patients in elderly care

A
  1. Immobility
  2. Incontinence
  3. Falls
  4. Delirium/dementia
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10
Q

What is included in the Comprehensive Assessment for Older People?

A

A holistic plan with recommendations for managing geriatric patients. Includes:
1. Identifying frailty (scoring systems and assessments eg TUGT)
2. Care plan
2. Medication review
3. Referal to geriatrician/old age psych if appt
4. Address underlying physical causes

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11
Q

What does the Care and Support Plan include?

A

A personalised patient-centred plan including
* Management goals for the patient.
* Anticipatory plans - urgent care, escalation, EoL.
* Named contact
* Physical, mental and social support

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12
Q

What is “Fit for Frailty”

A

A campaign by the BGS with guidance for managing patients with frailty

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13
Q

Osteoporosis: primary prevention & secondary prevention

A

Primary: lifestyle (weight bearing exercises), optimise/strop offending meds (e.g. steorids), dietary (increase Ca2+ and Vitamin D)
Secondary: Alendronic acid (bisphosphonates) first line for diagnosed osteoporosis (T-score -2.5 from DEXA scan).

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14
Q

Understand the role of the multi-disciplinary team in rehabilitation

A

REHAB MDT
**Neurologist: **overall responsibility for patient, diagnosis & investigation, prescribing/altering medication/intervention, monitoring progress.
OT: making adaptions for home & Providing support and advice for coping with ADLs
SALT: following dysphasia caused by stroke. Swallowing assessment.
Social workers: involved in social care (managing ADLs, coping at home, family involvement)
Nursing staff: may be reqd to visit the home to give meds, do basic care, check complications
Congitive threrapy - improve memory and cognitive function after sroke
Behavioural therapy: overcoming mental health problems such as depression or PTSD
Home therapy: brain stimulating games
Physio: regain function of limbs affected, balance and co-odrination

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15
Q

Limitations of sucessful rehab

A

BARRIERS AT 3 LEVELS: PATIENT, STAFF AND ORGANISATIONAL.

  • Depends heavily on patient engagement - e.g. engaging in physiotherapy and SALT requires the patient’s motivation
  • Can be a long process to recovery, not always linear, may have some set-backs - some deficits may be permanent
  • Patient’s comorbidities may prevent successful rehab - e.g. if recovering from surgery unable to partake in physiotherapy
  • Not enough specially trained staff
  • Pts are limited by access to rehab services - postcode lottery - services (e.g. social workers) are not provided equally throughout the country
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16
Q

Tools to assess risk of chronic back pain (2)

A
  • Yellow flags model
  • Start Back Tool
17
Q

Which biopsychosocial factors does the “yellow flags” model include? (A, B, C, D, E, F, W)

A

Risk factors for chronicity in back pain:
* Attitudes - negative
* Beliefs - “faulty”/hypochrondriac -catastrophisation
* Compensation - are they awaiting payment for injury?
* Diagnosis - still waiting on one? or limited understanding of diagnosis from doctor? or iatrogenic with no closure on what is causing pain?
* Emotions - stress, anger etc
* Family - overbearing/undersupportive
* Work - taking time off/unable to work properly?

18
Q

What is the STarT Back screening tool?

A

A more official version of the yelllow flags system for chronicity in back pain. Categorises it into mild, moderate and severe and gives recommendations for management

19
Q

Role for physio, osteopathy and chiropractice therapy in mgnmnt of back pain

A

NICE GUIDELINES:
Yes:
* Manual therapy (used by osteopaths/chiropracters/physio)
* Physio
* Psychological therapy

No:
* Traction (used by osteopaths)
* Orthotics
* TENS
* Acupuncutre

20
Q

MDT for inflammatory arthritis (RA, psoriatic, enteropathic)

A
  • Rheumatologist
  • Specialist nurses
  • Psychologists
  • Physio
  • OT
  • Podiatrist & Orthotist (specialist shoes/splints)
21
Q

Impact of untreated inflammatory arthritis on function and QoL

A

Impacts:
* Physical: inflammation (worsening of pain), increased risk of heart disease and diabetes
* Psychological: stress, catastrophisation, unpredictability of flare symptoms interfering with ADLS
* Social: burden on friends/family
* Financial: taking time off work, expensie on pain relief

22
Q

Options available for **complex discharge planning **

A

= If patients requires specialised care after leaving hospital
* Each hospital has its own policy
* treatment, support, point of contact, emergency contact, safetynetting, charges?, medication TTO 7 days
* Involves nurse in charge, discharge co-ordinator, pharmacist, consultant/doctor

23
Q

DVLA - neurological disorders - must inform DVLA to have how many months off driving:
* Seizures/Epilepsy
* Syncope -single episode - treated (?) single episode unexplained (?) or 2+ unexplained (?)
* TIA - if one TIA with neurological deficit (?), if one without (?), multiple TIAs over short period (?)
* Narcolepsy - can restart once..?
* Chronic neurological disorders - complete which form?

A
  • Must inform DVLA + 6 mo off for first seizure, for established epilepsy 12 mo off seizure free can reapply for license
  • Single - no restriction. Explained and treated - 4 weeks off. Multiple - 6 months. 2+ epiosdes = 12 mo off.
  • 4 weeks. 1 month off (don’t need to inform DVLA). 3 mo off & inform DVLA.
  • sufficient control over sx
  • PK1
24
Q

Consent guidelines for 14-16
16-18

A

14-16 - Assess Gillick competence; cannot refuse
16-18: Assume can give consent unless obvious; cannot refuse.