* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download 04 APD Examples and Explanations of
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 1 of 10 Note that the numbering of the Objectives listed match the numbering on the APDSPE rubric posted in Blackboard. Faculty Observation of Student Performance The preceptor will observe either a portion of the history or the physical at each session. 1. Prepared for experience: – Student brought appropriate equipment, APD packet, and an outline or template to organize gathering and documenting the H&P. Students should be on time for each session. Students should have prepared an outline to refer to while interviewing patients. Students should bring all recommended equipment. Students will turn in grades on time- by 6pm 2 days after each small group meeting. 2. Professional Appearance and Representation of Role to Patient. White Coat should be worn with Student ID. Student must always identify self as a student and not as a member of the patient care team. Not as a student doctor. Professional Dress includes: o No jeans. o Closed toe shoes only. No sandals, no gym shoes. Snow boots are acceptable with inclement weather. o Hair and nails groomed in neat fashion. o Men should wear ties. 3. Interviewing Skills: Elicits history from patient with appropriate use of open-ended and directed questions. Starts interview with open ended questions in order to get history from patient in patient’s own words. If patient is tangential or has difficulty responding to broad, open-ended questions, student focuses questions in more directed fashion. 4. Respect: Demonstrates respect for colleagues through participation in small group discussion. Respectful of patient and family. o Courteous. o Informs patient of each portion of physical before performing it. o Ends history or physical if patient asks. o Maintains respect for patient modesty and privacy.* *For the purposes of these educational encounters with volunteer patients, no patient should be asked to undress. It is acceptable to open the back of a gown to examine the back, and students should ask patients permission to lift the gown to examine the abdomen only after covering the patient’s lap with a sheet or blanket to protect modesty. If a student is unsure, they should ask their preceptor for help in completing a physical exam that respects the volunteer patients’ modesty. 5. Physical Exam Skills Appropriate for M2 student If time allows students are expected to do a complete physical exam. If time is limited due student needing to be reassigned to more than one patient, the student should be focus the physical exam on the organ systems related to the patient’s presenting and active chronic health problems. *No skin, axillary or inguinal lymph node exams that require the patient to undress without faculty member present.* *No genital or rectal exams at all* *No breast exams at all* Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 2 of 10 Students should ask patients with large breasts if they are willing to lift their breast to allow the student to listen to the heart at the mitral valve. The student should keep the patient’s breasts covered with the gown – ask faculty for help to protect the volunteer patient's modesty. Oral Presentation The goal is that students will be able to give an organized and concise oral presentation in approximately 5 minutes or less by the end of this course. 6. Oral Presentation - Clarity and Organization. Students can chose to use BRIEF notes or memorize their Oral presentations. Students will not be allowed to read from their Written H&Ps while giving their oral presentations. The student will gain familiarity with the pronunciation and use of medical terminology in the oral presentation. 7. Oral Presentation - Pertinence of History and Exam Presented The student will learn how to identify and present only the most pertinent information to present in an oral presentation. The student will begin to appreciate how to gear his or her oral presentation to the specific needs/ preferences of the audience that will hear the oral presentation. 8. Oral Presentation - Assessment of Major Problem. The student will learn how to expeditiously present their most important diagnoses for the patient and if necessary briefly support the diagnoses they have determined. At the M2 level. The student needs to be able to support why they are considering their diagnoses. The focus of this class is that students learn how to correctly organize and efficiently present their Assessment during an oral presentation. Pathophysiology will not be graded in APD. 9. Oral Presentation - Plan The student will briefly list the orders they would suggest for diagnostic, therapeutic and educational plans relating to the assessments they present. The students will be expected to only suggest plans for tests that they understand and can explain. Reassurance or follow up is a reasonable plan The focus of the class is that the students learn how to correctly organize and efficiently present their plan. Written H&P 10. Chief Complaint clearly stated Starts with introductory CC: A one sentence opening statement that clearly identifies the patient and why they sought medical attention and how long they have had symptoms that brought to the hospital this time. Example chief complaint format: CC: (Patient Initials) is a ______y.o. (man/ woman) who presented to the hospital ____ days ago with complaint of _______ that began ____ (days, weeks, hours) ago (when it began or more specifically when it became severe enough to warrant coming to the hospital.) 11. Source and reliability: Short, one-sentence statement to identify the source of your history and how confident you are that the source was reliable. Here are some examples of statements of reliability: Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 3 of 10 The source of the history is the patient who appears reliable. Or The source of the history is the patient’s wife as the patient was floridly demented and intubated at the time of the interview. Or The source of the history is the patient but reliability is in question as he appeared to be evasive and many details given were contradictory and the patient tested positive for cocaine during the last admission two days ago. Or The source of the history is the patient however reliability is in question as the only available translator was the patient’s ex-husband over the phone. 12. HPI logically organized in narrative form. Should tell a story of why the patient is seeking medical attention this admission. Usually should be in chronologic order. In the event of problems that the patient feels started over a few months ago. E.g. “It all began 20 years ago when…” Start at the most recent time that the symptoms became bad enough to seek medical attention this time. Then go back and include the back-story such as “The patient’s back pain worsened last week. He notes he has experienced similar symptoms intermittently over the last 20 years when…” 13. Uses subjective descriptions in HPI Subjective= Descriptions from patient’s perspective. The student is encouraged to use correct medical terminology to concisely describe those symptoms. If the student is unsure of correct medical terminology, they can always describe subjective symptoms from the patient’s perspective. Symptoms discussed in the HPI must have been able to be experienced by the patient. Observations made by the student do not belong in the HPI but rather in the Objective Physical Exam section. The student should organize the presence or absence of symptoms in the HPI so as to support or refute differential diagnoses that will be later proposed in the assessment section. The student should NOT propose differential diagnoses in the HPI. Diagnoses are only named and discussed later in the Assessment section of the H&P. “ Mr. D. had a deep barky cough productive of sputum and with hemoptysis. He reported fevers and chills, but denied weight loss or night sweats.” 14. Thoroughly characterizes symptoms Including: o Onset of symptoms o Provoking factors (made worse by…) o Palliative factors (made better by…) o Quality of symptom (e.g. is pain sharp, dull, tingling,) o Radiation of symptoms to other body areas o Severity (scale of 1-10, or how symptom did or did not affect patient’s usual activities) o Timing (e.g. progression of symptom, or comes and goes, or constant) 15. HPI includes pertinent information from rest of history Details of PMH pertinent to patient’s current admission are discussed in HPI. Positive and Negative ROS pertinent to patient’s CC are mentioned in HPI. Family and Social History pertinent to patient’s symptoms can be mentioned in HPI. For example: in pt with CC of chest pain and shortness of breath: Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 4 of 10 “The patient had similar symptoms of shortness of breath last month when he was admitted for asthma exacerbation. He reports tightness in his chest and coughing worse at night. He reports 1 episode of hemoptysis yesterday but has not had fever, or night sweats. He denies family history of lung cancer. He denies any known TB exposures. He has 12 pack year smoking history. “ 16. Statement informing reader of patient understanding of their illness. Ideally you will include a statement near the end of your HPI that informs the reader what the patient believes is the cause of their symptoms. You should not make a statement judging if this belief is correct or not- it is simply helpful to inform the other members of your healthcare team what the patient’s belief and expectations are. Notice how the statements below provide important insight regarding the patient’s understanding of his ankle swelling: “The patient feels that his ankle swelling began 30 years ago when he was abducted by aliens who still read his thoughts today.” Verses: “The patient feels that his ankle swelling occurs when he eats salty Chinese food and drinks too much water or if he skips his diuretic pills.” 17. History in addition to HPI is complete and listed in format easy to read PMH - as a list either organized chronologically or from most to least severe. PSH – also presented in list format and separate from PMH. Past Surgical History is listed chronologically or by level of severity 18. Family History listed for immediate family and those with related conditions E.g. Parents, grandparents, siblings, children, grandchildren. If possible a genogram is used. For the purposes of typed H&Ps students are not expected to take the time to draw a computerized genogram. Instead, simply list each member of the family history followed by the conditions that they suffered from. Example : Family History: Mother: died of breast cancer at age 38 Father died of MI at age 52 Maternal grandmother died of “Lung disease”, nonsmoker at age 48 (may have worked with asbestos Maternal Grandfather died health of car accident age 100 Paternal grandmother alive and well age 97 Paternal grandfather: died of stroke and brain cancer age 68 Sister: asthma, diabetes type 2, sarcoidosis Son: Congenital malformation of heart with multiple surgeries required before age 3 Grandson: died of sepsis after reconstructive heart surgery age 2 months Grandson: has “glass bone disease with blue eyes” (osteogenesis imperfecta?) age 7 Granddaughter: health age 9 Alternative: If many members of the family have the same diseases (an important pattern to elicit in the Family History) - it is preferred to list the Family History by disease: Example Family History listed by disease: Family History: Diabetes type 2: seven brothers and 2 sisters, maternal grandmother, paternal grandfather Stroke: 3 brothers (all before age 55- only one surviving), 1 sister (at age 38) Hypertension (All grandparents and both parents) Breast cancer: Mother onset age 38, 2 maternal aunts onset after age 50-all surviving Colon cancer: brother diagnosed age 44. Colon polyps: 6 brothers and 1 sister all biopsies benign Asthma: 3 daughters, mother, brother and maternal grandmother 19. Social History Patient lives alone or with… Occupation or disabled or retired Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 5 of 10 If time allows, social history can be expanded. However at a bare minimum, all patients should be asked about recent and past use of tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drugs. Smoking should be reported in pack years with note of approximate quit date or if still smoking. o There are 20 cigarettes in a pack. o Pack Years= # packs per day x # years smoking 10 pack years=2 packs per day x 5 years 10 pack years= half pack per day x 20 years. 20. Allergies/Adverse Reactions noted. List what patient is allergic to and describe what the reaction was. Penicillin causes nausea= Adverse Reaction Penicillin causes anaphylaxis= Allergy. Allergies should be listed in a separate and distinct section of history before listing medications. To avoid potentially life threatening medical errors, the allergy section must be easily readable as medical personnel may need to refer to it quickly in an urgent situation. 21. Medications List Ideally listed as: Name of medication # mg in each tablet , # tablets taken by what route at what times of day Example: Medication List: Lasix 20 mg 2 tabs by mouth AM and 1 tab pm Insulin NPH 60 units subcutaneously AM and 46 units pm Insulin Novolog Asparte 8 units subcutaneously with breakfast and lunch, 4 units with dinner Enteric Coated Aspirin 81 mg by mouth every day Lipitor 40 mg by mouth every night Glycerin suppository 1 by rectum every week if needed for constipation. * Note many patients do not actually know the names and doses of their pills and students are not allowed to look in the chart or call the patient’s pharmacy to confirm medication lists. However the student should use directed questions like those listed to try to elicit the following information from the patient: 1. How many different medications do you take each day? 2. What do you think each medication is for? 3. How many pills of each medication do you take at a time? 4. When do you take each medication during a typical day? By using such direct questions it is usually possible to still get an idea of how the patient takes their medications. Example of how to document medications when pt does not know specific drug names or doses: Medication List: 1 “blue pill every morning for blood pressure” 2 “water pills” every afternoon 1 cholesterol pill at bedtime 1 other pill every night –but patient is unsure why it is prescribed. “Cloudy insulin” 60 units every AM and 40 units with dinner every night 2 puffs of an “orange inhaler” twice every day A list like the one above can still be useful to assess the patient’s compliance with the recommended medication list. It also highlights a need to better educate the patient about their medications. 22. Review of Systems (ROS) Think of ROS as playing 20 questions (or 80 questions) with the patient about potential symptoms in every organ system from head to toe. The ROS should be about RECENT symptoms: Usually the ROS pertains to the last 3weeks to 3months as most. Organized by organ system. Review of Systems should be complete and extensive Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 6 of 10 o o See example in reading of example write up. Paul L. Fine The Wards: An Introduction to Clinical Clerkships, Excerpt “A Lengthy Example” from Chapter 8: The Written Presentation. Little Brown& Co., Boston, 1994: 84-95. When done correctly it is actually a fairly expeditious portion of the interview that often takes less time than gathering the HPI or performing the physical exam. It is common to use a template that includes a full ROS. Explain to the patient that you will be asking about a lot of different symptoms and ask them to tell you if they have experienced any of these symptoms recently. With a simple yes or no. Advanced interviewers will learn how to do the head to toe ROS while they are doing the head to toe physical exam. Students in this class are encouraged to try this in the 4th H&P once they have mastered the ability to ask a full ROS from memory before proceeding to the physical exam. A complete ROS is important to ensure that you do not miss other issues that are important for the patient’s health but may not be the patient’s focus for seeking medical care. o An example of why ROS is important: If your grandmother was admitted to the hospital for a broken hip and the admitting doctor skipped the urologic ROS he may not find out that she likely fell because she has been getting up to pee every 2 hours, is experiencing dysuria, and hematuria for 2 days. Without reviewing a full ROS, the reason for the fall, weakness or altered mental status due to urinary tract infection or possibly even urosepsis- could be completely missed. (Resulting in grandma being in urosepsis without being treated before getting her hip surgery done). Within each ROS organ system (positives before negatives) is a list of SUBJECTIVE SYMPTOMS that the patient either reports or denies experiencing. ROS does NOT include diagnoses or physical exam findings. o CORRECT: Skin: reports + itchy rash last week, +easy bruising, +flaking scalp, denies jaundice, neg stretch marks o INCORRECT: Skin: reports +eczema, + easy bruising from warfarin overdose, +dandruff, denies liver damage jaundice, neg stria of Cushings ROS section of H&P lists impertinent positive and negative symptoms. o The ROS section of the write up should only list those symptoms asked about in each organ system that do not seem to relate to the patient’s HPI. Impertinent positives= symptoms unrelated to the HPI that the patient has experienced recently. Report as POSITIVE ROS in both the oral and written presentations. Impertinent negatives= symptoms the patient denies experiencing recently that are not related to the HPI. Report as NEGATIVE ROS in the written write up only. Documenting negative ROS proves that you asked about these symptoms as a part of a thorough ROS. o Symptoms that you discover while asking ROS that seem to relate to the HPI are called pertinent positives or pertinent Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 7 of 10 negatives and are actually documented in the HPI and not repeated in the ROS section. Pertinent positive= symptom pertinent to the HPI that patient reports experiencing recently. Move pertinent positives to the HPI even if they were not discovered until gathering the ROS. Pertinent negative= symptom pertinent to the HPI that the patient denies experiencing recently. Move pertinent negatives to the HPI even if they were not discussed until you were gathering the ROS. 23. Physical Exam complete or student notes reasonable reasons for deferring portions. If you forget to do a section of the exam (or are unable to do it in some way) you must note this in your write up. Never just report it as normal or unremarkable because this could lead other members of the team to miss an important and critical finding and is not only dangerous for the patient but unprofessional and fraudulent. The patient’s chart can be reviewed in court and if any member of a healthcare team misrepresents any findings they can be found medically negligent, and charged with criminal charges as well as lose the support of their professional organization and or stripped of their medical license. Students who do this risk failing the course. Only report what you find on exam. o Own your exam findings. Only report your own objective findings in the physical exam section because any other team members will document their own findings in their write ups. Don’t make statements about your lack of experience with an exam component. The reader will know what level you are and take that into account. Sometimes the medical student is the only one who has enough time to go back and do the most extensive exam- so even if you’re senior attending doesn’t agree with you- you should still document exactly what you found on exam. o When you examine the patient together with a senior team member and your findings differ: First clearly note your findings then you can note the discordant findings by the more senior member of the team: For Example: Cardiac: S1,S2, Regular Rate and Rhythm, no murmurs, clicks or rubs by my exam but examined at same time with attending cardiologist who reports 4/6systolic ejection murmur at left sternal border 5th intercostal space. 24. The Physical Exam uses appropriate OBJECTIVE descriptions. Objective= what you directly observe or measure. The more advanced your physical exam skills= the more descriptive and informative your physical exam findings will be. Report PE as if you are describing what you saw to a blind person over the radio. Be specific and use every physical exam descriptor to exactly give the reader a clear description of what you saw. PE should never include subjective symptoms (subjective= history= pertinent subjective symptoms belong in HPI, impertinent subjective symptoms belong in ROS.) PE should never include diagnoses (diagnoses= belong in Assessment section). Examples of correct and incorrect terminology in Abdominal PE: Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 8 of 10 CORRECT PE: only uses objective descriptions of observable findings. Abdomen: 3x5 cm erythematous rash with papulopustular lesions at right upper quadrant. Bowel sounds active and low pitched all four quadrants, abdomen soft, tender to palpation in the left lower quadrant, no rebound, no guarding, no masses, no hepatosplenomegaly. INCORRECT PE: assumes diagnoses by using diagnostic terms (like eczema, tumors, aneurysms). Uses subjective descriptions (pain is subjectively felt by the patient, you objectively observe tenderness). Qualifies findings as “normal” (instead should describe findings objectively so the reader can decide if this is normal or not). Abdomen: eczema at right upper quadrant. Bowel sounds active and normal at all four quadrants, soft but painful on palpation of left lower quadrant, no rebound, no guarding, no masses, no tumors or aneurysms palpable, no hepatosplenomegaly. 25. The Physical Exam is organized by organ system and in list format Notice that except for the paragraph story format of the HPI and perhaps the Assessment, ALL other sections of the write up are expeditious list format to make it easier for the reader to recognize where to find the information routinely found in an H&P. 26. Problem List A concise list of all the patient's medical problems, listed in order of most urgent to least urgent. The medical problem that the patient sought medical attention for this time should be at the top of the list unless the patient’s life is in immediate danger from a problem that the patient does not recognize. The last items on the Problem List should address the patient’s health maintenance needs. The Problem List includes all known problems- including previously diagnosed issues in the PMH. The Problem List includes health problems that may not be addressed during this hospitalization or encounter but warrant follow up at later encounters. The Problem List is used as a tool to facilitate continuity of care across all health care settings. Example: Problem List: 1) Pulmonary Embolism 2) Depression with recent panic attacks 3) Diabetes 4) Coronary Artery Disease with history of Myocardial Infarction in 2003 5) New rash on feet most likely tinea pedis. 6) 50 year old woman who has never had mammogram 7) Due for colon cancer screening after discharge Assessment This is where you state your diagnoses. For your patient’s main problem you should use the IDEA method. 27. Assessment Paragraph for most important problem includes: I=Interpretive summary: points out parts of HPI, PE that are pertinent to the differential diagnosis. o Support your proposed diagnoses by referring back to information gathered in you History and Physical Sections of the Write up that supports your diagnosis 28. Assessment Paragraph for most important problem includes: Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 9 of 10 D = Differential diagnoses proposed reasonable for M2 student: o Define Diagnosis and link it to the patient’s History and PE. 29. Assessment Paragraph for most important problem includes: E = Explains reasons for choosing most likely diagnosis. o Rank differential diagnoses and commit to the most likely diagnosis by stating why you feel it is most likely. 30. Assessment Paragraph for most important problem includes: A= Alternative Diagnoses. o Define each alternative diagnosis within the same paragraph and explain reasons for prioritization of these differential diagnoses from most likely to least likely. Please see the exceptional example of an Assessment in your reading: Paul L. Fine, The Wards: An Introduction to Clinical Clerkships. Excerpt “A Lengthy Example” from Chapter 8: The Written Presentation. Little Brown& Co., Boston, 1994: 84-95. 31. Assessment includes brief assessment of additional problems that are presented in the order that you set in your problem list. Your main most important problem will include an assessment paragraph that analyzes your various differential diagnoses using the IDEA method described in objectives 27-30. Use the problems in your problem list as headings for each assessment. Additional problems not related to the main problem can be listed briefly with a brief statement about the stability each problem, or with a brief statement acknowledging possible differential diagnoses for each problem. Below is an example of an Assessment Section for an H&P for the patient who’s Problem List is shown in the example given for Objective 26. The Assessment follows the Problem List. Note that the headings for each Assessment follow the same order used to organize the Problem List. Assessment: 1) Sudden Shortness of Breath Pulmonary Embolism (PE) is most likely because the patient’s sudden shortness of breath with hemoptysis began after being immobilized on a long car trip and developing a red swollen calf. PE must also be considered first because it can be quickly fatal if not recognized and treated. Other differential diagnoses to consider include: Spontaneous pneumothorax (or collapsed lung) which can cause sudden shortness of breath but would not explain the calf swelling. Lung cancer is also a possibility as the patient has a 40 pack year smoking history, but she denied any weight loss over the last 6 months. Myocardial infarction could also cause sudden shortness of breath, but is not associated with hemoptysis and the patient denied any chest pain. Pneumonia is least likely because the patient did not have fever, chills, fatigue, or productive sputum. 2) Depression with recent panic attacks We need to consider the possibility that the recent panic attacks could have been symptoms of the pulmonary emboli frequently described as “an impending sense of doom”. Or could be due to running out of her depression medication 2 weeks before admission. 3) Diabetes -stable with good blood sugar control on current regimen. 4) Coronary Artery Disease with history of Myocardial Infarction in 2003 - Low suspicion for cause of current shortness of breath but at risk for recurrent MI. 5) New rash on feet most likely tinea pedis. -supported by itchy scaling. Could also be venous stasis. 6) 50 year old woman who has never had mammogram. -can address after discharge with her primary care doc. 7) Due for colon cancer screening after discharge - can address as an outpatient. Plan The Plan is a completely separate section that follows the Assesment section. Keeping the Assessment and Plan separate allows the reader to first understand your thought process to justify your proposed diagnoses that you explain in the Applied Physical Diagnosis- Student Performance Evaluation (APD-SPE) Examples and Explanations for each Objective Page 10 of 10 Assessment. The Plan section then clearly directs the team as to what you will be ordering to specifically clarify the diagnosis, treat the patient, and educate the patient. The Plan should ideally include: 32. A Diagnostic Plan (i.e. Labs or tests you would like to order in order to be able to clarify or confirm your diagnoses, including further physical exam maneuvers you would like to evaluate). You should only recommend diagnostic tests if you can explain how the findings would clarify your diagnosis. 33. A Therapeutic Plan (what you want to give the patient to help them get well or feel better: pain medication, physical therapy, electroshock treatment, simple reassurance that they are healthy etc). 34. A Patient Education Plan (to inform the patient how to correctly take their medication, or better teach them how to recognize their symptoms and seek treatment appropriately, to avoid straining their back at work, what their options are for birth control etc.). Below is an example of how to organize the Plan section of the H&P. This Plan would follow the Problem List and Assessment sections shown in Objectives 26 and 30. Notice that the order and headings are consistent between the Problem List, the Assessment, and the Plan. Plan: 1) Sudden Shortness of Breath: Pulmonary Embolism vs. spontaneous pneumothorax vs. lung cancer vs. myocardial infarction vs. pneumonia: i) Diagnostic Plan: (1) Chest Xray: -will show lack of peripheral pulmonary markings if pneumothorax, -may show a lung tumor if present. (2) D-Dimer level: since Ch-Xray can appear similar with PE and pneumonia, if D-Dimer level is normal this excludes PE. (3) CT chest or V-Q scan to confirm PE if D-Dimer level is high. ii) Therapeutic Plan: (1) supportive oxygen, (2) empiric antibiotics to cover until pneumonia can be excluded (3) If PE is confirmed start heparin. iii) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) Patient Education Plan: (1) Review with pt importance of smoking cessation and options to help quit. Depression with recent panic attacks: a) Plan to restart depression medication. Diabetes a) Plan to monitor glucose levels b) continue current diabetes medications. Coronary Artery Disease with history of Myocardial Infarction(MI) in 2003. Diagnostic Plan: check cardiac troponin enzymes & EKG every 8 hours x 2 . Therapeutic Plan: Give Aspirin 325 mg now. Pt Education Plan: Review low fat diet at time of discharge New rash on feet most likely tinea pedis. Plan antifungal cream to feet twice daily If not effective will consider other causes as outpatient. 50 year old woman who has never had mammogram Defer to after discharge. Due for colon cancer screening after discharge Defer to after discharge Sources: Fine, PL. The Wards: An Introduction to the Clinical Clerkships. Chapter 8. Boston: Little, Brown, 1994 Baker E. Challenging Students to Expose Their Thoughts in Write-Ups: The IDEA Method. JGIM 2003: 18 (suppl 1): 235.