Professional Documents
Culture Documents
In this section, we are going to give a brief summary about the 3 elements of the exam
that you are required to pass. It is important to consider the 3 elements equally in your
preparation because a high performance in 2 of them does not compensate a poor
performance in the third. It is generally known that the most challenging element for IMGs is the
communication part. However, the good news is that it is the best part to be improved with
efficient practice.
Because TOEFL examination is no longer a requirement for ECFMG certificate, this element
has been added to the final score sheet. It is intuitive to mention that this element is addressed
by the SP. This part should not be horrifying for the IMGs because what is really needed is to:
Understand the SP and make the SP understand you. In brief, this is what you should know to
help you with this part of evaluation:
You do not have to pretend an American accent if you do not really have it. Accent is
not part of your evaluation.
If you are not 100% fluent in English (which is usually the case for IMGs), speak slowly. Slow
speech minimizes the impact of your homeland accent and makes your words easy to
recognize. Clear pronunciation is what really matters.
When the SP talks, you should listen carefully and pay attention to understand. It is usually
not difficult but because sometimes the SP describes an event with multiple sentences,
you should not be lost. Do not distract yourself be thinking in the next question or trying to
write down his words in the same time. Listen, listen and listen.
During your practice, try to fix the way you ask the routine questions to feel familiar with
and recall easy. This includes introduction and closure sentences, review of systems (ROS),
past history, family history,
Use the simplest question formulation (e.g. do you have, did you have) as long as it is
applicable.
As detailed later, you will summarize the history to the SP at the end of information
gathering, this will help you a lot to recognize any misunderstood information.
If you practice English with an English speaking community, you can judge your performance in
this part. In general, this part is not challenging and what you need is to speak English fairly.
Again, do not be afraid of your accent, but try to speak clearly.
There are over 20 points that the SP is asked to check after you leave the encounter. You
should pay attention to each one of them and consider them all each time you practice. Print
this checklist and ask your study partner to evaluate your performance at the end of each case
practice. It is a common mistake that candidates concentrate on asking all relevant questions in
their practice and never receive a feedback for their communications skills.
Once you finish reading the door note, your first step is to knock the door. It is hard to miss
that because all the examinee will be knocking the door at the same time. Once you are
invited to enter the room, you can open the door and begin the encounter.
You should dress formally. Classic shirt and pants, a tie and a clean white coat (medical or
lab) are appropriate for the exam. It is another item that is easy to fulfill. However, you
should never smell sweaty. A deodorant stick or spray is mandatory in the day of the exam.
On the other side, strong perfumes are also disliked. Look professional, clean and do not
smell. That is it.
Once you are in the room, your first sentence should be close to that: Hello/Hi, Mr Y? My
name is X, I am the physician in the office today, nice to meet you
Then shake SPs hand. Continue your introduction by introducing your rule: I am here to ask
you some questions and do a brief physical examination, is that okay?
So to fulfill this part, you should introduce both yourself and your rule. You should be smiling
at that part. Please feel free to choose the introductory sentences that are comfortable for
you and fix them in your practice. This part should be easy with you. Never use sentences
like e.g. How are you? Are you okay? because this may motivate the SP to talk about his
complaint immediately and disturb your introduction.
This may be the most challenging part in the communication section. That is because you
need to keep comfortable eye contact with the SP and to write down occasional notes in
the blue sheet. These are some hints that may help you:
Your eye contact should be comfortable. Look kindly and do not stare!
If you feel uncomfortable to keep eye contact with a person. Try to look to the SPs
forehead. This could give the same impression!
If you need to have a look on your blue sheet or to write down some notes, try to
do this quickly and intermittently. Most importantly, do not look or write except
when you and the SP are not talking. If loss of eye contact is mandatory at
moments, it should not be while the SP is expecting you to listen and pay attention.
As mentioned earlier, only write the positive points in history taking and in brief, use
(X) if all the data are negative e.g. Family History: X, Allergy: X.
When you leave the SP to wash your hands, do not turn your back to him, try to
keep looking to him while washing your hands. It is a good policy to keep one
question to ask while washing your hand. It is a good time to keep eye contact as
well.
During PE (physical examination), you may be looking to the part you examine.
However, you need to talk to the SP before each step to explain what you are
going to do. It is generally advisable that you should not talk to him while the SP is
not seeing your face (e.g. standing behind him or giving him your back).
At the door note, the last name of the SP is provided. It is a very common mistake that you
forget to write it on your sheet. Do not forget that!
After knocking the door, this will be your first question before introducing yourself: Mr/Mrs X?
Once he/she says YES, you will begin to introduce yourself.
You need to keep the last name in front of your eyes. Try to address SPs last name at
different occasions e.g. taking permission to do the PE, transition from part to part in history
taking, encounter closure.
We covered this part under eye contact. Your target is to listen carefully to the SP. Do not
pay attention to any distracters while the SP is talking. Do not turn your back to him. When
the SP is asking you to address his/her worries, you should be completely focused on
respond to his/her concerns satisfactorily. Do not take this lightly. The SP impression about
your care, kindness and attitude is the essence of the examination. It is also important to
recognize SP impression and discuss their worries whenever you recognize that.
Your default facial expression should always be a SMILE. Keep smiling unless it does not
make sense (e.g. SP is telling bad news, SP was exposed to assault). You should show
empathy at appropriate situations. Examples include:
When the SP states his complaint, you should express empathy e.g. I am sorry to
know what you have been through. I will do my best to address your problem
When the SP starts to cry while recalling a bad memory, you should stop asking and
keep silent, show appropriate facial expression and offer a tissue and a glass of
water. You may also apologize for the stressing question. Do not continue asking
unless the SP permits you to do.
When the SP shows worry or concern about a serious medical and social issue, you
should offer your understanding of his/her concern. Answer these questions in a
way that relieves SPs stress if appropriate (avoid false reassurance).
You should show a respectful attitude towards the SP. Use neutral words in response to SPs
history and examination e.g. okay, all right and avoid judging words e.g. nice, good, great,
and excellent. Do not express your own judgment or give unnecessary reactions while you
are trying to take some time to think of the next question. Practice is important to adjust
your mind to neutral words. Do not express a negative attitude towards SP habits or
behavior.
All SPs are draped. The following is required to deal with draping appropriately:
You are required to take permission before untying the gown or lifting it to expose
any part.
You are allowed to expose the part you examine only. For example: do not expose
the abdomen and then go to examine the leg. Once you are done, tie the gown
immediately.
Do not examine over the gown, any part you examine or touch should be exposed.
If the SP covers his/her arm or leg with a dressing or a stocking, you should ask the
SP to remove it and expose the whole limb.
Throughout each encounter, you are required to ask few open ended questions. Usually,
the SP will respond verbosely. NEVER interrupt him/her. Listening appropriately to the SP is
part of your evaluation. The most useful situations for open ended questions are:
After you introduce yourself, you ask the SP: How can I help you? Then when he
addresses his/her complaints, you may respond with: Can you tell me more about
this?
When you finish data gathering and summarize information to the SP, you will then
ask him: Do you have any other complaints/concerns that you have not told me
about? This is actually important not only to address another open ended question
but to motivate the SP to mention information that you forget to ask about!
You should avoid leading questions which you usually ask to obtain a certain answer. This
does not mean that you will not ask focused questions. You just need to avoid questions
that reflect that you expect/want to receive a certain answer. You should ask: Do you
have headache? and not: you have headache. right? You have chills? Am I correct?
This is another easy point that you can overcome with careful practice.
Do not use multiple questions in one sentence to save time. Example: do you have
vomiting or diarrhea?
As mentioned above, you should avoid interruption of the SP. You should put in mind that
the SPs may be more verbose at some encounters. This is usually intentional and is part of
your evaluation. Always remember that communication challenges may impact your
score more than the questions or PE that you miss due to SP verbosity.
Paraphrasing means that you repeat SP particular answer in his/her own words. You only
need to paraphrase for few times to fulfill this item. It is also useful when you need to check
that you understand the SPs last words correctly.
This is another challenging point that can be overcome with practice. Avoid medical terms
(e.g. dysuria), and medical items (e.g. past medical history, family history) and use simple
words instead (e.g. pain with urination, your health in the past, questions about your
family). If it is essential to mention a medical term e.g. a possible disease or a diagnostic
approach, you should explain it in a simple language. Always provide your explanation
before the SP asks you about it.
In this section, we are going to illustrate how the encounter is generally managed. Some
encounters may vary according to the complaint of the SP. However, there are general
principles that you need to follow during your practice to feel familiar with at the time of the real
exam.
Once the exam begins, you will be asked to stand in front of the door that corresponds to
your number. You are not allowed to slide the door note cover unless you hear the
announcement. You will be provided with 12 sheets, 2 pens that you better hold in your
coat pocket and a stethoscope. Always remember to keep the stethoscope on your
shoulder and do not forget it at your desk. You better bring your own stethoscope
because the number of stethoscopes in each center may be limited. You are not allowed
to write on the blue sheet before you hear the announcement.
Once you hear the announcement, slide the cover. You will find a door note that
contains SPs last name, age, complaint and vital signs.
Unlike AMGs, IMGs do not enter the encounter immediately. Instead, you may spend 3060 seconds in front of the door. You may shorten this period with efficient practice and
calmness. Do not panic for losing these seconds. These few seconds could help you to
concentrate, organize your thoughts and write notes and mnemonics that will guide you
to manage the encounter efficiently. If your blue sheet is well written, you will save a lot of
time recalling questions inside the encounter and will avoid disorganized questions and
unprofessional presentation.
There are many ways to prepare your blue sheet. We are going to suggest one of them
here but you may modify it according to your needs. You should know that the blue sheet
is not that large and there are some words printed over it (adjust your expectations and
practice accordingly!).
Once allowed to write, you may divide your sheet into 4 parts and a header:
Use the header to write the SPs last name (NEVER FORGET IT) and age on the left
side. On the right side of the header, you may write any abnormal vital signs. It is
optional that you write the system that you are going to examine to keep it in front
of your eyes. If you forget or do not recognize vital signs, you may re-check them
again on your computer when you finish the encounter. However, it is better that
you recognize abnormal vital signs prior to the encounter because this may confine
your expectations inside the encounter.
In the first quarter, you may write HPI (analysis of the complaint). The questions for
each complaint may vary and you may need to cancel or add some questions.
However, the form is suitable for most cases:
O = Onset
P = Progress
C = Consistency
F = Frequency
D = Duration
A = Alleviating factors
A = Aggravating factors
A = Associated factors
In pain cases, you should add 4 essential questions:
S = Site
S = Severity
Q = Quality
R = Radiation
In the second quarter, you may write the mnemonics/figure/possibilities for the
differential. This is the part that you need to fulfill in the best way.
In the third quarter, you may just write (ROS). Do not write anything in this part unless
you receive positive information because in the patient notes, you will address ROS
as negative if nothing is there. You do not need to recall ROS questions because
you will ask them briefly and systematically from above downwards. Practice helps
you to recall these questions without effort.
In the fourth quarter, you need to write the mnemonics of the rest of history:
P = Past history
A = Allergy
M = Medications
H = Hospitalizations
S = Sleep
F = Family
O = Occupation & OBGYN history
S = Social history
S = Sexual history
A = Appetite
W = weight
E = Exercise and diet
T = Travel
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Once you prepare your sheet, knock the door. The SP will call you to come in. You can
open the door now. Always remember, smiling is your default unless indicated. A smile
should be your first presentation. When you open the door, ask about SP identity e.g. Mr.
X? Then you can enter the room.
Once you listen to SPs complaint, express empathy by facial expression and words like: I
am sorry to hear about what you experience and show support: I will do my best to help
you with this.
After showing empathy and support, ask your first open ended question: Can you tell
more about that?
In some encounters, the SP will respond with much information that may answer some of
your questions before you ask. Follow the SP and do not interrupt. If you feel that you did
not catch all the information, you may ask the SP to summarize by asking HPI questions.
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Remember, sheet quarters help you not to forget transitional phrases. When you move
from a quarter to another, address this to the SP. Begin the third quarter by: I want to ask
you some questions about your health in general, is that okay?
Unless you feel confused about the case, you may only ask 1 or 2 questions for each
system to cover it. Frequent irrelevant questions do not improve your score and waste
your time. However, be sure to cover all systems. Sometimes, you may be surprised by an
extremely important data that you forget to ask about!
The systems you need to cover are:
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O
P
F
C
D
G
A
A
S
Q
R
ROS
P
A
M
H
S
F
O
S
S
A
W
E
T
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In this section, we are going to provide a summary of clinical knowledge that can refresh
your mind. In general, you do not have to go deep in clinical reading as you may have done in
the CK exam. Instead, you just know about the presentation of the common differentials. We
strongly recommend that you read this section before practice.
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Cholecystitis
Ascending
cholangitis
Acute hepatitis
RUQ pain
RUQ tenderness
Positive Murphys sign
RUQ tenderness
Jaundice
Peptic ulcer
disease
Epigastric tenderness
Gastritis
Epigastric tenderness
Non-ulcer
dyspepsia
A diagnosis of exclusion
Perforated ulcer
Tenderness, rebound
abdominal pain
Nausea and vomiting
Heavy smoker, NSAID use
Past history of peptic ulcer pain
tenderness
Guarding
Gastric cancer
Loss of weight
Loss of appetite
Low grade fever
Splenic rupture
Pancreatitis
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Old patient
Dull epigastric pain radiating to the
back
Weight loss
Dark urine and pale stool
Heavy drinker and smoker
Mesentric
ischemia/infarction
Upper endoscopy
Non-invasive H pylori testing (serology for antibodies)
AST/ALT/bilrubin/alkaline phosphatase
HIDA (hepatobiliary scan)
Jaundice
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Appendicitis
Pelvic inflammatory
disease (PID)
Period of amenorrhea
Vaginal spotting
Lower abdominal pain, exacerbated
with movement
Nausea and vomiting
No efficient contraception
RLQ guarding
RLQ tenderness and
rebound tenderness
Ruptured ovarian
cyst
Sudden pain
History of ovarian cyst
RLQ guarding
RLQ tenderness and
rebound tenderness
Adnexal torsion
Sudden pain
History of ovarian cyst
Gastroenteritis
Abortion
Endometriosis
RLQ guarding
RLQ tenderness and
rebound tenderness
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Pelvic examination
Urine hCG
Cervical cultures
U/S-abdomen/pelvis
CT-abdomen/pelvis
CBC
UA
Laparoscopy
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In this section, we are going to exhibit the most important questions for each case and
how to memorize them. It is essential that you do not miss important questions and not to be
redundant as well. Furthermore, it is a poor strategy that you use mnemonics for all cases. It will
be difficult for you to recall above 50 mnemonics and it will be impossible to remember the
meaning for all the As, Es, Ss and so!. Accordingly, you will look confused while trying to
recall the full names and your attitude will not look professional. Instead: (1) keep mnemonics for
challenging cases only (2) use a mixture of mnemonics for some cases and figures (illustrations)
for the others to rest your mind. (3) use a mnemonic/figure that is apparently related to the case,
so that you can recall the suitable one for the suitable case and not to get lost. The stress of the
actual encounter makes things harder than they feel in the practice. So, try to use the easiest
approach for you.
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GERD
Aortic dissection
Pulmonary embolism
Costochondritis
Pneumothorax
Hemothorax
Pneumonia
MI/Angina/Cocaine
Pericarditis
MI/Angina: shortness of breath/sweating/heart racing/relation to exertion?
Cocaine induced: taking recreational drugs/relation of last dose to pain?
Aortic dissection: hypertension? Uncontrolled?
Pericarditis: recent flu/relation of pain to position? Relation to breathing?
Pneumothorax/hemothorax: shortness of breath/chest trauma?
Pulmonary embolism: leg clots/prolonged recumbence (recent surgery-flights)/OCPs?
Costochondritis: recent flu/relation to breathing?
Acute chest syndrome: history of blood disease/repeated blood transfusions
Closure:
Give your impression about the causes
Explain possible investigations
Education about diet (if the SP is a potential cardiac patient on unhealthy diet), cocaine
cessation, exercise/effort, stoppage of OCPs (if DVT is suspected)
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Closure:
Counsel about possible causes
Counsel about work-up, most importantly:
- Genital and rectal examination (you may ask about their value, you may be even
asked by the SP)
- Cystoscopy (if necessary, describe it as a tiny camera on a thin tube that is inserted
through the urethra to have a look on the interior of the bladder)
- Urine analysis and imaging
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Joint
Fracture
Metastasis,
multiple
myeloma
Lifting heavy
objects/ Exercise/
Trauma
Loss of weight
Spinal canal
stenosis
Paraspinal
muscle strain
Urinary
difficulty/incontinence
Stool incontinence
Erectile dysfunction
DEXA scan
Hotness, swelling,
redness/stiffness,
restriction of motion
Ankylosing
spondylitis
Numbness,
weakness,
tingling
Closure:
Counsel about possible diagnoses
Counsel about diagnostic work-up:
- Rectal examination (for urinary symptoms), breast examination (for possible cancer)
- Imaging of the back (X-ray and MRI)
Education about:
-
DEXA scan (once for life), Ca and vitamin D for postmenopausal women
- Need for rest (if disc herniation is suspected), including a note for the employer
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Closure:
Give your impression about possible diagnoses
Offer diagnostic work-up (particularly bone imaging, sonographic imaging of internal
organs)
Inform the SP about OBSERVATION; he/she should be under observation particularly if the
SP exhibits any symptoms related to head trauma or any significant injury.
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Examination:
General examination: do not forget pallor and thyroid
Chest and heart
Abdominal examination
Closure:
Explain impression (pregnancy, ectopic pregnancy or abortion according to context).
Prescribe diagnostic workup: repeat pregnancy test, do breast and pelvic exam, do
pelvic U/S, you may counsel for early pregnancy screening (Pap, urine, cervical culture,
screening for infection, cervical culture)
Offer education: (teratogenic factors)
-
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- Advice regarding unplanned pregnancy: she may need to discuss this with her
partner, and you would like to meet them to help them with their decision. If they
decide to continue, offer them a program that helps her to know more about
planning for a family.
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Closure:
Give your impression about the efficiency of diabetes control (according to symptoms
and glucose readings)
Explain diagnostic work-up
Offer education: SHEE (Empathy Education Hypoglycemia Support)
- First: Empathy: emphasize that diabetes could be controlled by diet, exercise, insulin
- Second: Education: offer diabetes classes for the parents and the child
- Third: Hypoglycemia: explain hypoglycemia and its symptoms and how to avoid it
(proper timed meals, moderate exercise, availability of sweets)
- Fourth: Support: the family and the school should be oriented about the child
problem to offer proper help if needed
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Violence
Osteoporosis
DEXA
Hotness, swelling,
redness/stiffness,
restriction of motion
Trauma,
exercise
Myositis,
strain
Arthritis
Angina
Numbness, weakness,
tingling
Dislocation
Fracture
Examination:
Examine the neck for range of motion
Examine both extremities for comparison:
- Inspection (for bruising & range of motion)
- Palpation (for tenderness arterial pulse)
- Neurological for upper limbs (motor, sense, DTRs)
Chest and heart examination
Closure:
Give diagnostic impression and explain workup (XR, MRI)
Counsel for domestic violence (offer contact information for support groups offer a
social worker assistance to arrange for senior living communities, any related sibling
abuse should be reported to child protective service )
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In this section, we are going to provide the full form of patient notes and the common
abbreviations that you are allowed to use. Note that you will note write the full patient note in
the exam. You need to report only the primary system in details.
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General Rules
Now you will sit on the desk beside your encounter, enter your number to open the note.
You have 2 strategies to use. Either to start from above (begins with history) or below (begin
with differentials). In general, the part you start with is the part that you spend much time
for. Your decision to choose one of these strategies depends on your typing speed, the
time you save by leaving the room early and your convenience according to your default
practice. The differential is the most critical part because it needs some time to think and is
the part of the note that presents your thinking most.
To address your history in a proper way, you should start with analysis of the complaint,
then proceed to the differentials; present positive information first beginning with data
that is most significant or relevant to the differentials you expect. Then you better write
some negative information that you did not find. You do not have to write all the
questions you asked, but at least you should mention some negatives that exclude
common diagnoses and make your differentials in the bottom of the note reasonable.
The summation of positives and negatives that you write usually cover most
differentials. This reflects your understanding of the clinical background of the case.
A good blue sheet helps you a lot. You may use this memory to recall data but
generally, this may not be efficient in actual examination as it is in practice particularly
when you are at the late encounters where you are not sure if this information belongs
to this SP or not. Your blue sheet should not contain much hand writing, only focused
few well written brief words that indicate positives. Negatives will be the Xs you made
in front of each question or differential. Because you usually write the mnemonic of
questions/differentials in the blue sheet at the door, you will be able to check your
sheet and write the positives and negatives accordingly.
While writing differentials, consider age and sex as factors that could support your
diagnosis e.g. cluster headache is more common in males
The 2 minutes left announcement should mean that you are at the second
differential or more.
When you write you diagnostic work up, prioritize the investigations that are directly
relevant to the differentials you select. So always have a look on the differential.
You should get familiar with the allowed abbreviations and avoid using unknown ones.
You can use this official link (P. 13): http://www.usmle.org/pdfs/step-2-cs/cs-infomanual.pdf
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ADULT SHEET
HPI: ----- yo M c/o ------------. The pain started ------------ (mention all positives and
negative in complaint analysis and differential diagnosis) . No previous similar
episodes.
OB/GYN:
G1P1
Menarche at age 14
LMP
Last PAP smear 6 months ago and was normal, no history of abnormal PAP
smears
Contraception
SH:
Cigarette smoking 1 PPD (pack per day) & for 20 years & stopped 3 years
ago +
Occasional EtOH (ethyl alcohol) & for 10 years (or 1-2 bears at the
weekend) & CAGE 0/4 +
No regular exercise +
Works as +
Married, live with her husband and 2 children, has good support system
(family, friend)
Heterosexual, has one partner in the last 2 years, use condoms, no history
of STDs,
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FH:
OR: noncontributory
VS:
HEENT:
Eye:
o No pallor or icterus
o PERRLA (pupil equal, rounded, reactive to light and accommodation)
o No fundoscopic abnormalities (no papilledema)
o EOMI (extra-ocular movements intact) without diplopia or lid lag, visual
fields full to confrontation
o No nystagmus (or vertical gaze nystagmus)
Ear:
o No redness to ear canal, no cerumen, TMs (tympanic membranes) with
light reflex
o no tenderness to auricle or periauricle,
o Weber test without localization
o + Rinne test (air conduction > bone conduction)
o Negative tilt head
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In this section, we are going to address some situations and questions that you may be
confronted with in the real encounter. Understanding these points helps you to manage a
variety of similar situations during the exam
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33
This summary can be used to revise your knowledge in the last days prior to the exam. This
part addresses the most important questions, the specific examination that should not be
forgotten in each case, major points of closure, and the relevant workup
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35
T: exposed to trauma
T: change weight or appetite, difficulty initiating, maintaining stream, weak stream, small caliber,
dribbling
E: Vigorous exercise
D: Diabetes when it was diagnosed, how, which type, is the child still having these troubles
C: Complications:
fainting, visual, itching, infections, TIAs/stroke, heart racing, bowel changes/discomfort, urine
changes, sexually changes, foot infection, WNT, weight changes
F: Follow up: How do you follow up blood sugar? Who do? Average readings? Last reading? Checkups? (eye foot)
T: treatment: Diet? Exercise? What type of treatment? Schedule? Compliance to treatment? Provider?
Site?
Work up:Serum glucose, HbA1c, UA, urine microalbumin, BUN/Cr, nerve conduction studies
DD:of all complaints