H for the History

The last two years of the graduation are most interesting and most difficult too. This is the time when the students start wearing white coats, hanging the stethoscope around their necks or in the pockets of their coats and start getting the feel of being in medicine. Small groups of students are posted in different rotations like internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, orthopedics, ENT, Ophthalmology , Obstetrics etc.

We would suddenly be rushing behind the residents and the senior teachers, requesting them to teach us. They of course would be busy in the patient care. Sometimes, it would be a long wait when someone would directly teach us. Most of the time the teaching would be in form of attending the long rounds which the senior doctors would take along with the residents and we would just be the bystanders.

The patients who attend medical colleges are usually smarter than the students themselves. Those with chronic illness are already too much in suffering and to add to it, the daily rush of students rushing in and out of the wards does not add anything to reduce the pain. At times the students trying to hone their skills becomes more of an irritation.

History taking is one of the key skills in medicine. This is necessary not just for passing the exam but afterwards as a practicing doctor it is one of the most important skill. The fundamentals of this basic step is the doctor patient confidence. A doctor who makes the patient feel comfortable and cared for is able to let the patient unburden himself by telling him all about his complaints, how it started etc. We as students forgot this aspect. We as a group of students would flock on a patients bed and the patient who wanted to just rest would most likely feel uncomfortable. We would bombard him with questions …since when do you have it, what were your first complaints, how did it progress? Do you have any other chronic illness? Do you smoke? Do you drink? Do you have any family history?

This would not stop there. After that we would start our skills of palpation, percussion and auscultation. We were the inexperienced medical students and now when I look back I feel how uncomfortable the patient would be with multiple hands touching here and there, all trying at once to experiment and hone their skills.

At times, one of the students would be caught and assigned to prepare the case and present for discussion the next day. Case presentation meant taking the history, examining the patient and then coming to a differential diagnosis. The student would very diligently prepare for the case in his limited knowledge and then caught next day in front of the whole team. At times, the patient would be then chuckling at the ignorance of medical students.

I remember the grand history taking during my final year surgery exam. We were Hindi speaking people in the heartland of Marathwada. I was able to learn only a little Marathi and that too could understand only if spoken very slowly. The patient i received could speak only the local dialect and thus there was a total communication gap between him and me. He had a huge lump on his back which had been operated before. All I could make out was, that it had just been biopsied before. The examiner just looked at me helplessly and i was pretty sure i would flunk in surgery. It was a great relief when the results were out.

Photo by Karolina Grabowska on Pexels.com

I am participating in #A2Z2021 hosted by Blogchatter. Blogchatter community binds all the Indian bloggers and has put blogging at a forefront. You can visit them at https://theblogchatter.com

Read the previous post here A for Anatomy dissection Hall B for Biochemistry equations Coffee and late night conversations D FOR DRUGS ( PHARMACOLOGY ) E for Exhausted Doctors F for Forensic G for Genius and Not so Genius!



26 responses to “H for the History”

  1. Anjalie Sharma Avatar
    Anjalie Sharma

    Great insights about the medical profession, something the ordinary mortals never get to hear

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Anjalie Sharma Avatar
    Anjalie Sharma

    Oh I pressed publish at half the comment above. Thank you for bringing these insights. As a patient it’s my experience, it gives great confidence to see a doctor check a patient’s history and note it down. Looking forward to all the posts in your series, great reading them.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Manisha Bhawatkar Avatar
      Manisha Bhawatkar

      History taking reminds me of all my clinics ..
      Back to clinics ..

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Dr Shazia Qureshi Avatar
    Dr Shazia Qureshi

    History taking is very important in every branch of medical faculty and it reminded me the days of my clinics

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Gayathri P Amonkar Avatar
    Gayathri P Amonkar

    Enjoy reading all your posts. Looking forward to the next one 😊

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Your history-taking instance reminded me of my days with the NGO. At that time, I was working with the Leukemia kids in a Cancer hospital and also used to double as a Technical support person when that person is off. I was supposed to record one person’s history on a computer and he gave me his symptoms sheet written in Tamil. I couldn’t read and when I asked him to read aloud, that person made a huge hue and cry…padke aate hai, but can’t even read your own mother tongue. I couldn’t explain to him that I am not from Tamilnadu.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. India is land of diversity

      Like

  6. Good your examiner understood your problem with the communication gap..

    Liked by 1 person

  7. […] Read the previous posts here A B C D E F G H […]

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  8. you were very lucky that the examiner understood your limitation with the language. My sister actually learnt Malayalam (she did her medicine from Calicut Medical College) to be able to take history etc. Though now learning Malayalam has had benefits, even in dubai she was able to bargain better!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I too learnt Marathi and can noe understand it after staying 10 years in Maharashtra…but that particular patient spoke some local dialect of interior village …

      Liked by 1 person

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About Me.

I am a histopathologist based in UK. I find solace in my work, nature and books. My musings are my own personal beliefs.

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