What is it about?
In carrying out a holistic palliative care assessment the palliative care clinical nurse specialist needs to develop the knowledge and skill of history taking and health assessment to make safe and competent decisions with patients regarding the future management of their care. This article examines this process in making a differential diagnosis with particular reference to the respiratory physical examination of a patient with a history of lung cancer using the Calgary–Cambridge Model. The model gives structure to the preparation, history taking, and physical examination (inspection, palpation, percussion and auscultation) before explaining, planning and closing the consultation, while considering the palliative patient’s and family’s individual wishes and goals.
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Why is it important?
Holistic person-centred assessment is crucial to timely interventions in palliative care. Excellence in history taking and physical assessment facilitates this.
Perspectives
Additional skills development for specialist practitioners is a must if they are to deliver effective person-centred care and such skills as comprehensive history taking and patient focused clinical examination skills aid practitioners in making a nursing diagnosis.
Daphne Martin
Queen's University Belfast
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This page is a summary of: History taking and physical assessment in holistic palliative care, British Journal of Nursing, December 2016, Mark Allen Group,
DOI: 10.12968/bjon.2016.25.22.1250.
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