Last year one of my teacher ( 85 years old now, was a great surgeon of his time) advised me about " The flow" of oral presentation of patient, he told to take every apparently minor details in history, bcz which is looking minor now, might help in diagnosis at last. After watching Dr. Rishi's lecture I can clearly relate now, why he is so right. My medicine final year exam is coming , i will definitely remember these tips while i will be presenting my patient. Thanks again Osmosis.
wow, thank you for sharing! this helps me a lot and yes, those little details that mostly lack attention of is still part of the cases - which is important
I am a Family Nurse Practitioner Student and your videos have helped me through my quizzes and my practicum rotation. I These videos have helped me with formulating diagnoses and recognizing illnesses. I have recommended your videos to my friends Thank you
My impression of third tip is that one needs to be careful...Please correct me if I'm wrong, but if you are not actively caring for a patient when looking at their chart, it is a HIPAA violation. However, since he said you call the patient to learn how he's doing, I think that would be fine and quite admirable.
Happy Osmosis is teaching communication skills, because when it comes to communication the Osmosis crowd is the best. Keep 'em coming. OK most of my comments are on "End of Story," a most important part of medical care that is widely neglected. Socioeconomic status is a large determinant of outcome. For example, if the patient or family cannot afford prescribed medication they may not complete therapy. Was an insurance claim for hospitalization denied? Is the home/work environment conducive to healing (have we discharged a kid with high lead levels back to a home that has high Pb in water or paint?) These are all issues that are often beyond the ability of any clinician to impact. However, it is critical to patient care, and clinician should be aware of what and why external events influence results. Under the best of circumstances (rare) another member of the team might help. But clinicians should try and stay on top of these care issues. Finally, when it comes to giving an oral presentation, don't forget to remove your goofy looking headphones:)
Last year one of my teacher ( 85 years old now, was a great surgeon of his time) advised me about " The flow" of oral presentation of patient, he told to take every apparently minor details in history, bcz which is looking minor now, might help in diagnosis at last. After watching Dr. Rishi's lecture I can clearly relate now, why he is so right. My medicine final year exam is coming , i will definitely remember these tips while i will be presenting my patient. Thanks again Osmosis.
wow, thank you for sharing! this helps me a lot and yes, those little details that mostly lack attention of is still part of the cases - which is important
I am a Family Nurse Practitioner Student and your videos have helped me through my quizzes and my practicum rotation. I These videos have helped me with formulating diagnoses and recognizing illnesses. I have recommended your videos to my friends Thank you
My impression of third tip is that one needs to be careful...Please correct me if I'm wrong, but if you are not actively caring for a patient when looking at their chart, it is a HIPAA violation. However, since he said you call the patient to learn how he's doing, I think that would be fine and quite admirable.
Packed and pointed video.Very insightful.Thanks.
Very welcome, Vivian! 😊
This helped me a great deal, thank you.
Love you guys. Things are much better to understand form listening
The lectures......... 🙏💖
It's great to learn from you, sir.
truly helpful!many thanks!!!
Our pleasure! 👍🏽
Thank you
I think the third tip is quite interesting. Thank you for sharing. Always love your videos .
Best vedio.. Thank you sir
Nice vedio.Make some vedio on case history planning
This is really helpful thanx
Glad to hear that! 😊
Third tip is interesting
super valuable 💕 thank youu
I read once when question a patient on his illness to use a open ended question? Let the patient answer. Have you ever heard of this technique?
Yes.. But after listening to patient, use leading qs to find missing details
😊thanks
Welcome! 😊
Happy Osmosis is teaching communication skills, because when it comes to communication the Osmosis crowd is the best. Keep 'em coming.
OK most of my comments are on "End of Story," a most important part of medical care that is widely neglected. Socioeconomic status is a large determinant of outcome. For example, if the patient or family cannot afford prescribed medication they may not complete therapy. Was an insurance claim for hospitalization denied? Is the home/work environment conducive to healing (have we discharged a kid with high lead levels back to a home that has high Pb in water or paint?)
These are all issues that are often beyond the ability of any clinician to impact. However, it is critical to patient care, and clinician should be aware of what and why external events influence results. Under the best of circumstances (rare) another member of the team might help. But clinicians should try and stay on top of these care issues.
Finally, when it comes to giving an oral presentation, don't forget to remove your goofy looking headphones:)
the 3d tip is very interesting, esp for research. thank you for sharing :)
Ty
Thanks
good
cool dude
Will you recruit me in future??
👍👍