Competency information
Details
Initiate a consultation, elicit information, clarify as necessary, summarise, and empathise and use active listening techniques while taking a patient history.
Considerations
- The features that should be present in an effective patient consultation.
- Structure of a consultation model e.g. the Calgary-Cambridge model using a logical sequence that includes:
- brief biographical
- history of presenting complaint
- past history
- smoking/alcohol
- medication (prescribed and other)
- allergies
- family/social
- concerns and expectations
- summary
- commonly used questioning techniques used during history taking and know when to use them.
- Difference between a health professional-centred and patient- centred consultation.
- How to modify techniques for patients with special needs, relevant to the circumstances of the patient.
- The importance of checking for patient allergies, in case they are not already documented.
- Key symptoms relating to respiratory and sleep disorders.
- Changes in the normal anatomy and physiology that result in abnormalities of respiratory and sleep systems.
Relevant learning outcomes
# | Outcome |
---|---|
# 2 | Outcome Plan, prepare and undertake a range of respiratory investigations, including challenge testing and non-invasive respiratory muscle function measurements. |
# 3 | Outcome Plan, prepare and undertake complete overnight pulse oximetry and limited multichannel recordings in a variety of patient conditions to obtain a range of subjective measurements of sleepiness in patients presenting with excessive daytime sleepiness. |
# 4 | Outcome Plan, prepare and undertake trials of the effectiveness of CPAP therapy to assess patients’ interface requirements and commence ventilation using appropriate settings. |