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“Are you otherwise fit and well?”: Past medical history questions in UK paediatric consultations

Accurate diagnosis and treatment depend upon detailed knowledge of both the child’s presenting symptoms and their past medical history. However, the process of soliciting past medical history has never been subject to systematic scrutiny in actual clinical practice. To examine the function of the qu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Patient education and counseling 2024-04, Vol.121, p.108104-108104, Article 108104
Main Authors: Jenkins, Laura, Hepburn, Alexa, Potter, Jonathan, Macdougall, Colin
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Accurate diagnosis and treatment depend upon detailed knowledge of both the child’s presenting symptoms and their past medical history. However, the process of soliciting past medical history has never been subject to systematic scrutiny in actual clinical practice. To examine the function of the question “are you otherwise fit and well?” to elicit a child’s general medical history in UK paediatric allergy outpatient consultations. Examination of 30 video-recorded UK paediatric outpatient consultations involving children (2–10 years), caregivers, and one doctor. We identified, transcribed, and interrogated 13 examples, deploying the systematic and rigorous method of conversation analysis to elucidate the question’s micro-design elements and their consequences for the consultation’s trajectory. Asking “Are you otherwise fit and well?” is built to efficiently solicit a problem-free report of good health. Nonetheless patients can and do raise other relevant matters. In practice, the question initiates several interactional matters simultaneously: establishing/resolving (mis)understandings of “fitness” and “wellness”; negotiating opportunities for children’s participation; and importantly, a shift towards discussing more general wellbeing. Past medical history questions unavoidably generate broader interactional matters which are skilfully resolved in real-time between clinicians, caregivers, and children. Clinical training could be greatly enhanced by integrating insights into the interactional consequences of asking questions, particularly in the complex multiparty environment of paediatrics. While the question ‘Are you otherwise fit and well’ clearly serves an important function, clinicians should be alert to the possible problems it might raise, especially when directed towards younger children. •Assessing a child’s general health can be vital for accurate diagnosis and treatment.•We studied questions about general health in real consultations for the first time.•“Are you otherwise fit and well?” involves navigating complex interactional matters.•Participants treat the question as a shift to discussing general well-being.•Clinical training should incorporate interactional consequences of questions.
ISSN:0738-3991
1873-5134
DOI:10.1016/j.pec.2023.108104