Formative past papers 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Prevalence and Incidence

A

●prevalence = the number of people in population with a specific disease at a single point in time or in a defined period of time

●incidence = the number of new cases of disease in a population in a specified period of time

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2
Q

List actions the government could take to stem the rise in obesity:

A

● health education (diet / exercise)

tax unhealthy foods e.g fat tax

● ban advertising unhealthy food

● improve exercise facilities

subsidise healthy food

● funding of NHS treatment for obesity e.g bariatric surgery

legislation: proper labelling/ ingredients

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3
Q

List examples of what the GP could do to help individual patients with weight loss:

A

● role modelling

tailored advice on specific diet / exercises

education about obesity risks

● referral to dietician

● prescribing weight loss medication

● treat diseases that contribute to obesity

● tackle underlying causes e.g depression

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4
Q

List 5 other health professionals who could also be involved in obesity management or prevention

A

● community dietician

psychologist

pharmacist

bariatric surgeon

● practise/school nurse

● health visitor

● midwife

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5
Q

Explain the difference between statistical and cultural definitions of normality

A

● statistical normality = based on normal distribution curve / standard deviation

● cultural normality = based on norms and values within a certain group (community)

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6
Q

How might obesity affect an individual’s health at a psychological, physical and social level?

A

● psychological = reduced self-esteem

● physical = difficult to move or keep fit

● social = ostracization by peers

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7
Q

GP gatekeeper meaning

A

controls patients’ access (via referral) to specialists

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8
Q

Advantages of GPs as gatekeepers

A
  • keep people out of expensive secondary care
  • continuity of the doctor-patient relationship
  • patient does not know which speciality to go
  • referral to appropriate department so apporopriate use of resources
  • limits exposure to certain investigations e.g. X-ray

personal advocacy

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9
Q

Disadvantages of GPs as gatekeepers

A
  • patients have less choice in secondary care
  • stress on GP to know everything about every disease
  • dependent on individual GP knowledge, attitudes, skill, practice organisation
  • puts stress on a good doctor-patient relationship
  • seeing GP increases time it takes to receive treatment
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10
Q

Possible physical health effects from a job

A

○ Too tired to do long shifts

○ dangers of working on an X (oil rig)

○ dangers of transportation to X (oil rig)

adjustment to day / night shift patterns

○ potential for obesity due to abundance of food (in canteen)

○ spouse may feel stress from having to look after kids alone

○ potential for improved physical health in him if he makes use of healthy eating options & facilities offshore

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11
Q

Possible psychological health effects from a job

A

anxiety & stress due to dangerous working environment

○ anxious about security of his employment

○ anxiety & stress about uncertain return home e.g weather delay

○ possible depression in either due to repeated periods of isolation

○ anxiety & stress in children due to separation

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12
Q

Possible social health effects from a job

A

Positives

○ well paid employment, good lifestyle, decent car, to go on holiday

○ no smoking / alcohol (when offshore)

○ able to spend additional time with family and friends when off (during offshore period)

Negatives

​○ relationship difficulties due to nature of job

○ may binge drink (when onshore)

discipline problems in children due to ‘absent’ father figure

substance misuse due to stressful nature of job

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13
Q

5 categories of hazard

A

● mechanical

● physical

● chemical

● biological

● psychological

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14
Q

How would you deal with a patient asking about the health status of a relative

A

● maintain X’ confidentiality (MUST - 1 mark)

● consider need to maintain X’ trust

● consider GMC guidelines

acknowledge their concern and ask them why she is concerned

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15
Q

4 ethical priniciples

A

● beneficence (do good): maximise care

● non-maleficence (do no harm): minimising risk of harm

● justice: recieve care that everyone in their position would be entitled to

● autonomy:a patient’s right not to take proposed treatment even if fully informed of benefits

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16
Q

culture def (2 answers)

A
  • systems of shared ideas, concepts, rules and meanings that underlie and are expressed in the ways that human beings live
  • complex whole which includes knowledge / beliefs / art / morals / law / customs
17
Q

ethnicity def

A
  • cultural practises and outlooks that characterise and distinguish a certain group of people;
  • e.g common language/customs and beliefs / tradition
  • term preferred over ‘race’
18
Q

Race

A

a group of people linked by biological / genetic factors

19
Q

Potential difficulties when interviewing patients with cultural differences

A

● lack of knowledge about health issues

fear / distrust

racism or bias

language barriers

3rd party presence (e.g family members )

● differences in perceptions / expectations

● examination taboos

gender difference between doctor / patient

religious beliefs

● they may not be entitled to NHS care

20
Q

6 social classes

A

● professional

● managerial & technical

● skilled non-manual

● skilled manual

● partly skilled

● unskilled

21
Q

How may culture influence smoking behaviour in different social classes

A

lower social classes see larger numbers of people around them smoking and are more likely to accept it as normal behaviour

● those around them are also more likely to accept the start of another individual smoking as normal behaviour (no stigma attached)

22
Q

Primary care proffesional to tackle obesity and give role

A

● dietician = individual dietary advice

● pharmacist = OTC anti-obesity medication or weight management programmes

● health visitor = health education; advice on healthy diet

● GP = prescription of weight reducing drugs

● practise nurse = weight clinics

● midwife = encourage breast feeding; early dietary advice

23
Q

3 models of stres

A
  • Engineering model
  • Medico-physiological model
  • Psychological model
24
Q

Engineering model

A

● stress acts as a stimulus which the individual must resist

● if the stimulus becomes too intense or prolonged, the individual breaks

25
Q

Possible coping mechanism for stress

A

problem focused

emotion focused

combination of problem / emotion focused

26
Q

Guidance/co-operation relationship

A

● doctor exerts authority and patient is obedient

● patient has a little feeling of autonomy and participates to a small degree in relationship

27
Q

3 types of doctor-patient relationship

A

authoritarian / paternalistic

mutual participation

guidance co-operation

28
Q

5 types of questions used in medical interviewing

A

open questions = not seeking any particular answer , allows patient to tell their story

direct questions = asks about a specific item

closed questions = can only be answered by yes or no or an equivalent

reflected questions = allows doctor to avoid answering a direct question from the patient

leading questions = presumes answer

29
Q

Nonverbal ways doctors can facilliate the interview

A

listening

● use of silence

● posture/ body language

● specific gestures

facial expressions

eye contact

layout of room (not talking across desk)

30
Q

Approximately how many patients are registered on average with each GP in the NHS in the UK

A

1200-2000 patients each

31
Q

% of people reffered on to secondary care from primary care

A

3% (accept 2-5%)