Collecting Subjective Data: Health Assessment
Collecting Subjective Data: Health Assessment
Collecting Subjective Data: Health Assessment
Health Assessment
DR. REGIE P. DE JESUS
Purpose of Assessment
• To establish baseline information on
the client
• To determine the client’s normal
function
• To determine the client’s risk for
diagnosis function
• To provide data for the diagnostic
phase
THE PURPOSE
OF ASSESSMENT
• Interviewing
• Physical Assessment
Interviewing
• Interviewing
– Interview - planned communication or
a conversation with a purpose
– Used to:
• Get or give information
• Identify problems of mutual concern
• Evaluate change
• Teach
• Provide support
• Provide counseling or therapy
Directive Approach to
Interviewing
• Nurse establishes purpose
• Nurse controls the interview
• Used to gather and give information
when time is limited, e.g., in an
emergency
Nondirective Approach to
Interviewing
• Rapport-building
• Client controls the purpose, subject
matter, and pacing
• Combination of directive and
nondirective approaches is usually
appropriate during information-
gathering interview
Types of Interview
Questions
• Closed questions
– Restrictive
• Yes/no
• Factual
– Less effort and information from client
– “What medications did you take?”
– “Are you having pain now?”
Types of Interview
Questions (cont’d)
• Open-ended questions
– Specify broad topic to discuss
– Invite longer answers
– Get more information from client
– Useful to change topics and elicit
attitudes
• Neutral question
• Leading question
Neutral Questions
• uestion the client can answer with-
out direction or pressure from the
nurse, is open ended, and is used in
nondirective interviews.
• Examples are “How do you feel
about that?” “What do you think
led to the operation?”
Leading Questions
• Are those that suggest a particular
answer
• used in a directive interview, and
thus directs the client’s answer.
• E.g.
– You do not miss any doses of your
medication, do you?
– So you’ve had sex with someone other
than your boyfriend recently, have you?
Factors in Interview
Setting
• Time
– Client free of pain
– Limited interruptions
• Place
– Private
– Comfortable environment
– Limited distractions
Factors in Interview
Setting (cont’d)
• Seating arrangement
– When a client is in bed, the nurse can sit
at a 45-degree angle to the bed. This
position is less formal than sitting behind
a table or standing at the foot of the bed.
– In group interview, circular or horseshoe
arrangement is best.
• Distance
– Comfortable
Distance
• Intimate: up to 18 inches from
another person
• Personal: 1 ½ to 4 feet away. The
distance most frequently used for
interviews
• Social: 4 to 12 feet away
• Public: > 12 feet away
Factors in Interview
Setting (cont'd)
• Language
– Use easily understood terms
– Interpreter or translator
Some productive
communication patterns…
1. Opening questions: “Tell me about…”
2. Reflection: Repeating the patient’s key statements
3. Clarification: “What do you mean by…”
4. Empathetic responses: Show understanding and
acceptance
5. Confrontation: Make observations “You appear to…”
6. Interpretation: “Do I understand you to be saying…”
7. Silence
8. Direct questions
9. Summary
Interview Stages
• Opening – establish rapport, orient client
• Body – client communicates, nurse asks
questions
• Closing – nurse ends interview when
necessary information is collected
• Phases
– Pre-interaction,
– Initial interview.
– Focused interview
Procedure and Notations
• Always Review Chart Before Seeing
Patient Note: The interview guides the
focus of the physical assessment process.
• Dress appropriately. How you look
communications either respect or
disrespect for and toward the interviewee.
Judgments are made (rightly or wrongly)
based on appearance. When in doubt,
wear what there is no doubt about.
Environment for interview
1. Sit down in clear view of patient, preferably at eye
level.
2. Distance of 1 ½ to 4 feet (personal distance most
frequently used for interview).
3. Have patient sit next to desk rather than peer over
desk (as if over a barrier). Or it on two chairs
placed at right angles
4. Put the chart to the side if possible. The chart
itself can be a barrier between you and the
patient.
5. If you need to take notes explain this to the
patient.
Comprehensive Health
History
• Health history provides a
comprehensive portrait of the pt’s
past and present health.
• Components are as follows:
– Biographic/Demographic Dats
– Reason for Seeking Care (Chief Complaint)
– Present Health or hx of present illness
– Current medications
– Family History
– Review of Sysems
Demographic Data
• Name
• Address and phone number
• Age and birth date
• Birthplace
• Gender
• Marital status
• Race, ethnic origin
• Occupation
Reasons for Seeking Care
(Chief Complaint)
• This is a brief spontaneous statement
in the pt’s own words that describes
the reason for the visit
• It states one (possibly two) signs or
symptoms and their duration
• It is not a diagnostic statement
• Reason for seeking care – because it
incorporates wellness needs
• Sign – an objective abnormality that can be
detected on physical examination or in
laboratory studies
• Symptom – a subjective sensation that the
person feels from the disorder
• It is enclosed in quotation marks to indicate
the person’s exact words.
• Example
• “I had dizziness and ringing of the right ear”
as verbalized by the pt.
History of Present Illness
• For the well person, this is a short
statement about general state of health
• For the ill person, this is a chronological
record of the reason for seeking care, from
the time the symptom first started until
now (describes information relevant to C.C.)
• E.g. “Please tell me all about your headache,
from the time it started until the time you
came to the hospital.”
History of Present Concern
Memory-mnemonic
COLDSPA
• C haracter: describe the sign/symptom. How does it feel
(sharp, dull, aching, throbbing), look (shiny, bumpy, red
swollen, bruised), sound (loud, soft, rasping), smell (foul,
sweet, pungent.
• O nset: When did it begin?
• L ocation: Where is it? Does it radiate?
• D uration: How long does it last? Does it recur?
• S everity: How bad is it?
• P attern: What makes it better? worse?
• A ssociated factors: What other symptoms occur with it?
Memory-mnemonic
PQRST
a. Provocative factors
b. Quality
c. Radiation/ Region (Location)
d. Severity of pain
e. Timing
Memory-mnemonic
OLDCART
• Onset
• Location
• Duration
• Character (quantity, quality)
• Associated manifestations (setting,
symptoms)
• Relieving/aggravating Factors
• Treatment
Sample
• Five days prior to admission (PTA), patient
developed intermittent fever, headache, chills and
generalized body malaise. She then took Paracetamol at
standard dosages (500mg, TID) on her own as advised by
her mother. Fever had been on and off in the next 3 days.
1 day prior to admission, after minimal obliteration in fever
and headache, she had diffuse abdominal pain with a scale
of 7/10, repeated vomiting and diarrhea accompanied by
nose bleeding. On the day of admission , patient continued
to have episodes of the said symptoms and these alarmed
the patient’s parents. Few hours PTA, numerous rashes on
the arms were noted by her parents thus seeking medical
attention. On the evaluation in the emergency
department, a few additional rashes were observed,
evidence of spontaneous bleeding hence admission
Past Health History
• Past health events may have residual
effects on the current state of health
• Previous experience with illness may
give clues on how the pt responds to
illness and to the significance of illness
for him or her
• Include: date, problem, hospitalizations,
symptoms, treatment, current status –
ongoing? resolved?
Past Health History
Past Health History
1. Previous experience with illness, childhood illness?
– Immunizations – diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis,
rubella, measles, mumps, polio, TB, hepatitis,
varicella, etc.
– Allergies – Ask: Any allergies to food, drugs,
pollen, beestings, clothing, chemicals, animals
or anything in environment? Note both the
allergen and the reaction (rash, itching, runny
nose, watery eyes, difficulty breathing).
– Include illnesses not requiring hospitalization
• Childhood Illnesses – Measles, mumps,
rubella, chicken pox, pertussis, and
strep throat
• Serious or Chronic Illnesses – Diabetes
Mellitus, Hypertension, heart disease,
cancer, seizure disorder
• Hospitalizations – Cause, name of
hospital, how the condition was treated
and how long the person was
hospitalized
Past Health History
2. Surgical history: include dates,
problem, where occurred, where
operation performed, complications?
– ask about tonsils, adenoids and
appendectomy?
– ask about blood transfusions, reactions?