Clinical assessment of adults
- If emergency or person seems very unwell go straight to Early recognition of sepsis
- If clinical assessment conducted in custody — refer to your health service policy
Attention
- Culturally safe approach
- Make person feel comfortable
- Consider gender issues
- Consider need for interpreter
- Are appropriate family members present if needed
- Holistic and comprehensive
- Consider whole person — context of their lives, families and community
- Be guided by population health principles (ie accessibility, public participation, health promotion, appropriate technology and intersectoral cooperation)
- Explore the person’s illness experience, impacts, treatment goals
- Consider chronic conditions/on-going health problems/age-appropriate screening
- Be guided by context and environment
- Systematic
- History informs examination
- History, then observations or physical exam
- Share power with person
- Ensure partnership between clinician and person
- Negotiate history taking and management plan with person
- Encourage person to share in decision making and own their own health
- Build person’s self-reliance and health literacy
- Provide coordination and continuity of care
- Recognise shared care
- Succinct, pertinent, person focused documentation
- Send summaries to nominated services
- Coordinate complex care
- Collaborate with colleagues
- Utilise recall systems
- Encourage clinical reasoning
- Considers age and place, risk of person, what is most likely and what you can’t afford to miss
- Use problem solving approach to reach diagnostic hypothesis
- Promote clinical safety and quality
- Work within individual’s scope of practice
- Use endorsed best practice treatment protocols (RPHCMs), quality improvement processes and procedures
What you need
Equipment
- Clinical record (file notes, electronic medical record)
- Clinical manuals
- Stethoscope
- Thermometer
- BP machine with range of cuff sizes
- O₂ sats monitor with range of probe sizes
- Scales and stadiometer (height measurement)
- Tape measure
- Blood glucose meter
- Blood collection equipment
- Urine pots, urine dip sticks
- Education materials about condition and/or treatment (eg displays, models, pamphlets)
- POC testing as available (eg ECG, Hb, chronic conditions monitoring)
What you do
Before starting consult
- Check clinical record for
- Current and past medical and surgical history
- Current scripts and recent medications
- Allergy status
- Last set of observations and pathology tests
- Any outstanding actions or overdue recalls
- Make sure you are in a place not to be disturbed, comfortable, well lit, private room and adequately equipped
- Consider own AND person’s safety
Consultation procedure
- Open consult — greet person by name, introduce yourself and establish rapport — consider 4Fs – family, football, food (as in hunting) and fun
- Offer interpreter if necessary
- General impressions — consider person's appearance, demeanour, speech, hearing, gait, posture, body symmetry, any tremors, odour, dental care, skin condition and interactions with others
- Check name, next of kin and DOB
- If person different gender — check if health professional of different gender needed
Reason for presentation — Acute / Non-acute
- Story of why they presented today
- Establish concerns and expectations
- Listen, encourage, don’t interrupt and use SILENCE
History — acute presentation
If person seems very unwell go straight to Early recognition of sepsis
OLDCARTS
O nset — when did it start
L ocation — where does it hurt, where is problem
D uration — how long, had it before, what happened then
C haracteristics — description of pain, problem
A ggravating factors — anything that makes it worse
R elieving factors — anything that makes it better
T reatments — what have they tried, what do they think it is, how it is impacting on
them and others, anything else
S igns and symptoms (other) — other problems, quick systems review, anything else you
need to know to look after them
- Have they had contact with someone different, been doing anything different lately (eg travel, work, activities)
- If you can’t work it out — work backwards. What were they doing, what did they eat/drink this morning, last night, yesterday
- Explain what you are doing/thinking, why you need to ask more questions
History — non-acute presentation
Current health review
- Immunisation status
- Appetite, nausea, change in weight
- Physical activity — when, what, how often
- Sleep patterns, energy
- Smoking/alcohol/other substance use — how much, how long, quitting experience
- Urine, bowels, periods, sexual health
- Emotional wellbeing — motivation, enjoyment, more or less happy, looking forward to anything, anxiety, self harm, domestic/family violence — 'Do you ever feel unsafe'
Medicines
- Prescribed — how long, what, when, why, any problems
- Over the counter, herbal, traditional, other people’s
- Contraception
Allergies
- What happens when exposed
Past medical history — from patient, relatives, other clinics, hospital records
- Illnesses — as child/adult, psychological
- Accidents, injuries, family violence
- Chronic conditions
- Hospital admissions, operations
- Gynaecological/obstetric — menstrual cycle, STI’s, number of pregnancies, number of live births, child spacing, contraception
Family medical history — partner, children, parents, siblings, grandparents
Social history — home situation, education, occupation, income source, marital/de facto status, mobility, environmental issues, family violence, cultural supports and responsibilities
Clinical examination
- Use look, listen, feel, discuss
- Rapid physical assessment
- Look for signs of chronic conditions
- General appearance (alert, dehydrated, febrile, wasted) including gait and speech
- Calculate REWS — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Weight, BGL
- Examine nails and both hands — nicotine staining, scars, clubbing, tremor, swollen joints, cool peripheries, fungal infections
- Eyes — jaundice, anaemia, cataracts
- Mouth and tongue, hydration, dental care
- Jugular venous pressure
- Auscultate heart sounds and anterior breath sounds
- Lean person forward, observe respirations, auscultate lungs, palpate for tenderness
- Lie person flat, observe, auscultate and palpate abdomen
- Inspect/palpate both legs for swelling, perfusion, pulses and oedema
- Use history to determine any detailed examinations needed of relevant systems
- Skin exam
- Eye assessment
- Ear exam
- Mouth, throat, teeth and gums exam
- Lungs and respiratory system exam
- Abdominal exam
- Rectal exam
- Foot exam
- Investigations as determined from history and examination
- Other investigations as needed — U/A, pregnancy, Hb, ECG, BMI, waist circumference
- POC testing as available and relevant
- Offer appropriate screening tests — Adult Health Check, STI check — man, woman
Examination findings
Consider
- Reason for presentation
- Other likely health issues
- Age/place/risk — persons risk given their age and the setting
- What things are often missed/can’t be missed
- What is most likely
- Seek further advice — medical consult as needed
Discuss
- Summarise and reflect on findings with person
- Explore person’s knowledge and clarify — include long and short term implications
- Use opportunities for brief intervention and health promotion as appropriate
Negotiate management plan
- Use best practice treatment protocols for management guidelines
- Discuss goals/priorities and negotiate management (including referrals) with person and significant others as appropriate — confirm management plan is acceptable to person and family
- Consider context and environment in negotiating management plan
- Plan long term management for identified risk factors, public health/preventive health issues and screening
- Ask if there are other questions, encourage and reassure
- Provide appropriate illustrated or written resources
- Agree on follow-up
Close consultation
- Cover contingencies — ensure person knows when to return, how to contact services if needed
- Check person understanding and agreement of management plan
- Provide referrals, prescriptions/medicines as needed
Documentation
- Update persons record using organisations documentation process (eg SOAP, SODAF)
- Update required recalls using organisations process
- Send letters/summaries/referral to other services identified by person
Reflect on consult
- How did it go
- What did you notice about person, about yourself or your reactions
- Identify any learning needs, remember self-care