This book is the companion book to 'The Unofficial Guide to Passing OSCEs'. OSCE examinations are used worldwide as a critical part of medical student assessment, yet there is often little preparation for them provided by medical schools. The Unofficial Guide to Passing OSCEs is intended to fill this gap. It includes 92 scenarios, covering medical history taking, clinical examination, practical skills, communication skills, plus specialties, meaning that everything for medical students is covered in one place. The book is designed to allow students to role play a real life OSCE, with each station containing a) a briefing for an actor playing ‘the patient’ b) a briefing for the ‘student’ and c) a mark scheme and questions to ask for ‘the examiner’. This book has relevance beyond examinations, with the mark scheme checklists acting as a day-to-day reference for professionals.
Le informazioni nella sezione "Riassunto" possono far riferimento a edizioni diverse di questo titolo.
Zeshan Qureshi is a Paediatrician based at Great Ormond Street and the Institute of Global Health. He graduated with Distinction from the University of Southampton, and has published and presented research work extensively and internationally in the fields of pharmacology and medical education. Whilst working in Edinburgh he was part of the leadership team developing a near peer teaching programme, where by junior doctors, throughout south east scotland, were both trained to teach, and delivered teaching across every hospital in the area. This book is an extension of this philosophy: that junior doctors and fresh graduates know how to express complex ideas in order for it to be easily understood from a students perspective. That junior doctors can teach, and write in a complimentary way to senior doctors: one that is friendly and fun, easy to read and relevant to both exams, and the day to day to life of junior doctors.
1. Histories (Matt Harris),
2. Examinations (Lizzie Casselden),
3. Orthopaedics (Chris Gee),
4. Communication Skills (Matt Harris),
5. Practical Skills (Chris Moseley),
6. Radiology (Mark Rodrigues),
7. Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Matt Wood),
8. Psychiatry (Sabrina Qureshi),
9. Paediatrics (Zeshan Qureshi),
Histories
Cardiovascular History:Chest Pain
Respiratory History:Productive Cough
GI History:Abdominal Pain
GI History:Diarrhoea
Neurological History:Headache
Intermittent Claudication
Back Pain History
Haematological History
Breast History
Sexual History:Vaginal Discharge
Station 1 CARDIOVASCULAR HISTORY: CHEST PAIN
Candidate Briefing: Mrs. Jones is a 60 year-old lady who presented with a two-hour history of central chest pain, shortness of breath and sweating. Please take a history from Mrs. Jones and then present your findings.
Patient Briefing: You are 60 years old and your name is Mrs. Jones. You have presented to the emergency department today with a two-hour history of central chest pain. The junior doctor has come to take a history from you.
The chest pain is central and came on gradually 2 hours ago. The pain is dull in character and radiates to your left arm. The pain came on whilst you were watching television and has not yet gone away. At the moment there is nothing that is making the pain worse although you do not feel like moving. You took some paracetamol earlier but this did not relieve the pain. The pain is eight out of ten in severity.
In addition to the chest pain you are also feeling short of breath and sweaty; both of which have come on over a similar time period to the chest pain. You have no nausea, palpitations, presyncope, syncope, ankle swelling, cough, sputum or haemoptysis.
You are known to have unstable angina and recently you have noticed that your angina pain is coming on with less and less exertion and it has been associated with breathlessness. You did not seek any help for the chest pain and hoped that it would get better again.
You also have high blood pressure and diabetes. You have never had a heart attack, a mini stroke, stroke or problems with circulation in your legs. You have never been told you have high cholesterol.
You take amlodipine 5mg and aspirin 75mg once a day and your diabetes is diet controlled. You have no drug allergies. Your father died of a heart attack aged 50 and your mother has type 2 diabetes. You currently smoke 20 cigarettes a day and have done for the last 40 years. You drink 2-3 glasses of wine every evening. You eat a lot of takeaways and do not eat much fruit or vegetables. You do not do any regular exercise. You are a retired secretary.
If asked, your main concern is that you are having a heart attack and are worried that you are going to die. You are hoping that the doctor will be able to reassure you.
Mark Scheme for Examiner
Introduction
Clean hands, introduce self, confirm patient identity and gain consent for history taking
Chest Pain History
Site
Onset
Character
Radiation
Timing and duration
Exacerbating factors
Relieving factors
Severity
Previous episodes of chest pain
Associated Symptoms / Systemic Enquiry
Shortness of breath
Autonomic symptoms (nausea, vomiting, sweating)
Palpitations
Presyncope and syncope
Ankle and calf swelling
Cough and sputum production
Haemoptysis
Past Medical History
Previous chest pain. Angina or myocardial infarction
Previous interventions (angiography/CABG)
Stroke or peripheral vascular disease
Diabetes mellitus
Hypertension
High cholesterol
Drug History
Drug and allergy history
Family History
Family history of heart disease (including age of any significant events e.g. myocardial infarction)
Social History
Smoking status. Duration and quantity of cigarettes smoked
Alcohol intake, lifestyle (diet, exercise) and occupation
Finishing the Consultation
Elicit patient concerns
Summarise history back to patient
Thank patient and close consultation
General Points
Polite to patient
Maintain good eye contact
Appropriate use of open and closed questions
Presentation of case
Questions And Answers for Candidate
With a convincing history, what ECG changes would support immediate percutaneous coronary intervention?
• With a convincing history, I would be concerned by ST elevation of 1mm or more in consecutive limb leads (I, II, III, aVF, aVL, aVR); or ST elevation of 2mm or more in consecutive chest leads, or new onset left bundle branch block (though some centres are now using ST elevation of 1mm in the limb leads as the criteria for PCI)
What artery supplies the sinoatrial tissue of the heart?
• The right coronary artery supplies the sinoatrial nodal artery 60% of the time, the remaining 40% of the time it is supplied by the left circumflex artery
What areas of the heart are supplied by the left anterior descending artery?
• The left anterior descending artery supplies the anterolateral myocardium, the apex and the interventricular septum. Typically it supplies up to 55% of the left ventricle
Additional Questions to Consider
1 // What is the differential diagnosis of chest pain?
2 // How might you differentiate the pain of an MI from pericarditis on history?
3 // What are the immediate and later complications of myocardial infarction?
4 // What is the role of primary angioplasty in acute myocardial infarction?
5 // What advice would you give this patient on discharge?
6 // According to current recommendations, what drugs should be on a patient's discharge letter post acute MI?
7 // What groups of people are at higher risk of a silent myocardial infarction?
Station 2 RESPIRATORY HISTORY: PRODUCTIVE COUGH
Candidate Briefing: Mr. Gordon is a 60-year-old gentleman who presents with a 3-day history of a productive cough and has been finding it increasingly difficult to sleep and get around his house. He is a lifelong cigarette smoker. Please take a history from Mr. Gordon and present your findings.
Patient Briefing: You are 60 years old and you are called Mr. Gordon. You have presented to hospital with a three-day history of a productive cough. You have been finding it increasingly difficult to sleep and get around your house because of breathlessness.
Your cough started three days ago and has been getting gradually worse. You are now having severe coughing bouts eight times a day and producing sputum each time. You estimate that you are producing two cupfuls of sputum a day. Your sputum is yellow / green in colour and is thick in consistency. You have not coughed up any blood.
You have been feeling increasingly short of breath over the last three days which came on relatively quickly. You are now breathless at rest and you also feel "wheezy". You can normally walk about 400 yards on the flat before you become breathless.
You have also been experiencing chest pain for the last two days. The pain is in the right side of your chest and is sharp in character. The pain does not move anywhere else, it is constant but is worse when you take a deep breath. It has been relieved slightly by taking paracetamol. At worst it is a six out of ten in severity. You normally have some mild ankle swelling which has not changed recently. You have lost 3kg of weight in the last two months.
You were diagnosed with COPD five years ago and take inhalers for this. You have never needed hospital admission for your COPD before. You have never had tuberculosis or a DVT. You do not know what a pulmonary embolism is but you have never had a clot on the lungs. Regarding medications you use a tiotropium inhaler once a day and a salbutamol inhaler when you need to. You have no drug allergies. Your father was a lifelong smoker and suffered from chronic bronchitis.
You are also a lifelong cigarette smoker. You have smoked approximately 20 cigarettes a day for the last 50 years. You have not had any recent travel. You no longer work but used to be an IT consultant. You have never been exposed to asbestos. You drink 5 pints of alcohol a week and do not keep any pets.
Your main concern is that you are becoming increasingly reliant on your wife for help with general day to day activities and feel that you are struggling at home.
Mark Scheme for Examiner
Introduction
Clean hands, introduce self, confirm patient identity and gain consent for history taking
Cough
Duration, character and frequency
Sputum production and frequency
Sputum colour, volume and consistency
Haemoptysis (volume and frequency)
Shortness of Breath
Duration
Speed of onset
Exacerbating/relieving factors
Usual exercise tolerance (how far can they walk on the flat?) and current exercise tolerance
Orthopnea
Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea
Associated symptoms/Systemic Enquiry
Chest pain (SOCRATES assessment)
Wheeze
Ankle swelling
Weight loss
Stridor
Temperature / rigors / night sweats
Past Medical History
Previous breathlessness and investigations
Asthma/COPD (including disease control, previous admissions to hospital and ITU)
Tuberculosis
DVT/PE
Chest trauma/Operations
Malignancy
Drug History
Drug history (including inhalers, courses of steroids and antibiotics) and allergies
Family History
Family history of respiratory disease and atopic illness
Smoking History
Smoking status (including duration and quantity of cigarettes in the past)
Social History
Recent travel
Occupation and any exposure to asbestos in lifetime
Pets
Alcohol intake
Finishing the Consultation
Elicit patient concerns
Summarise history back to patient
Thank patient and close consultation
General Points
Polite to patient
Maintain good eye contact
Appropriate use of open and closed questions
Presentation of case
Questions And Answers for Candidate
Classify the causes of pleural effusion and list two causes in each category.
• Transudative and exudative pleural effusions
• Transudative – cardiac failure, renal failure, hepatic failure, hypothyroid, Meigs' syndrome
• Exudative – pneumonia, pancreatitis, malignancy (primary or secondary) TB, trauma, abscess, connective tissue diseases e.g. rheumatoid arthritis, SLE
List 3 common bacteria associated with community acquired pneumonia?
• Strep pneumoniae
• Mycoplasma pneumoniae
• Staph aureus
• Haemophilus influenzae
Which cancer is most associated with asbestos exposure?
• Malignant mesothelioma
Additional Questions to Consider
1 // Can you list some of the red flag symptoms that would raise your suspicion of possible lung cancer?
2 // Which type of asbestos fibre is considered the most carcinogenic?
3 // List 5 possible causes of haemoptysis
4 // List 2 occupational lung diseases
5 // List 2 lung diseases caused by exposure to animals
6 // List 5 causes of lung fibrosis. (Supplemental question: can you classify this further into causes of upper zone fibrosis and lower zone fibrosis?)
Station 3 GI HISTORY: ABDOMINAL PAIN
Candidate Briefing: Mrs. Smith is a 25-year-old patient complaining of abdominal pain and vomiting. Please take a history from Mrs. Smith and present your findings.
Patient Briefing: You are 25 years old and your name is Mrs. Smith. You have presented to hospital with abdominal pain and vomiting.
You were completely well until two days ago when you started to develop abdominal pain. The pain is on the right side in your lower abdomen. The pain came on suddenly and is sharp in nature; however it doesn't move around your abdomen. The pain is constant and has been getting gradually worse. The pain is made worse if you move around and is better if you stay still. At worst the pain is 8/10 in severity. You have never had this type of pain.
You currently do not feel like eating but your weight has been stable recently. You are feeling sick and have been vomiting for the last 12 hours. You have vomited 4 times but there has not been any blood. You have not had any problems with swallowing. Your bowels have been normal and you last opened them yesterday. You do not know what the word jaundice means but your skin has not turned yellow. You have not experienced any urinary frequency, dysuria or haematuria. You have had no vaginal discharge, bleeding or pain on intercourse (not that you've been trying and with the pain at present you are not remotely interested in finding out). Your last menstrual period was 7 weeks ago.
You have no significant medical or surgical history, except recurrent episodes of chlamydia infection which have required multiple courses of antibiotics. You are not taking any regular medications and do not have any allergies. There is no significant family history. You have never smoked and drink 1-2 glasses of wine a night. You have not had any recent travel and do not know anybody else who has had similar symptoms.
Your main concern is that you think you might have appendicitis and are worried you might need an operation. You hope the doctor will be able to tell you what he thinks is wrong with you.
Mark Scheme for Examiner
Introduction
Clean hands, introduce self, confirm patient identity and gain consent for history taking
Abdominal Pain History
Site
Onset
Character
Radiation
Timing, frequency of pain and duration
Exacerbating factors
Relieving factors
Severity
Associated Symptoms
Anorexia and weight loss
Nausea, vomiting (including haematemesis and bilious vomiting), abdominal distension
Dysphagia
Dyspepsia
Change in bowel habit (frequency and consistency of bowel motions)
Blood or mucus per rectum
Jaundice
Urological symptoms (frequency, dysuria, haematuria)
Gynaecological symptoms (vaginal discharge, bleeding, dyspareunia)
Last menstrual period
Past History
Past medical history (including previous abdominal pain and investigations)
Past surgical history
Drug History
Drug history
Allergy history
Family History
Family history (e.g. inflammatory bowel disease, coeliac disease)
Social History
Smoking history
Alcohol history
Recent travel
Contact with infectious sources (e.g. family, friends)
Finishing the Consultation
Elicit patient concerns
Summarise history back to patient
Thank patient and close consultation
General Points
Polite to patient
Maintain good eye contact
Appropriate use of open and closed questions
Presentation of case
Questions And Answers for Candidate
If this patient's LMP was 7-weeks late, what tests would you perform?
• Pregnancy test or urinary beta-hCG
What are the common causes of acute pancreatitis in the UK?
• The commonest causes of acute pancreatitis in the UK are gallstones, ethanol and trauma (be it iatrogenic – ERCP, or blunt trauma e.g. handlebar injuries)
Can you list the structures found in the transpyloric plane (L1)?
• Lumbar vertebra L1, spinal cord (and upper part of the conus medullaris)
• Origin of superior mesenteric artery from the aorta, termination of superior mesenteric vein
• Pylorus of the stomach, 1st part of duodenum & duodenojejunal flexure
• Fundus of the gallbladder, neck and body of the pancreas
• Spleen
• Upper pole of the right kidney and hilum of the left kidney
• Left and right colic flexures
Additional Questions to Consider
1 // Give five differential diagnoses you would include as causes of an acute abdomen.
2 // List three causes of haematemesis.
3 // Relating to hernias, what is the difference between incarceration and strangulation?
4 // Please tell me some of the radiological findings in small bowel obstruction.
5 // What are the causes of large bowel obstruction?
6 // What is a volvulus and how is it managed?
7 // Define intussusseption.
8 // What is a Meckel's diverticulum?
9 // What is a Richter's hernia?
Excerpted from The Unofficial Guide to Passing OSCEs by Zeshan Qureshi. Copyright © 2013 Zeshan Qureshi. Excerpted by permission of Zeshan Qureshi.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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