Read Every Patient Tells a Story Online

Authors: Lisa Sanders

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Every Patient Tells a Story (40 page)

BOOK: Every Patient Tells a Story
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14
Studies have repeatedly shown:
Hill J. Effect of patient education on adherence to drug treatment for rheumatoid arthristis.
Ann Rheumatic Dis
. 2001;60:869–875. Kripalani S, et al. Interventions to enhance medication adherence in chronic disease.
Arch Int Med
. 2007;167(6):540–549.

14
Patients who understand their illness:
Lin E HB, et al. Working with patients to enhance medication adherence.
Clin Diabetes
. 2008;26:17–19.

16
A diagnosis of terminal cancer:
Cassell EJ. Diagnosing suffering: a perspective.
Annal Int Med
. 1999;131:531–534.

Chapter 2: The Stories They Tell

28
Current thinking focuses on stories as the key:
Lucey CR. From problem lists to illness scripts: a new strategy to learn and teach professional thinking in small groups, a lecture given 1/14/03. Hunter KM.
Doctors’ Stories: The Narrative Structure of Medical Knowledge
. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991, p. 17. Montgomery K.
How Doctors Think: Clinical Judgment and the Practice of Medicine
. New York: Oxford University Press 2006;45–53. Bowen JL. Educational strategies to promote clinical diagnostic reasoning.
N Engl J Med
. 2006;355:2217–25.

28
These stories, what researchers now call illness scripts:
Schmidt HG, Rikers RMJP. How expertise develops in medicine: knowledge encapsulation and illness script formation.
Med Ed
. 2007;41:1133–39, Charlin B, et al. Scripts and clinical reasoning.
Med Ed
. 2007;41:1178–84.

29
One of the ways doctors are taught to think about disease:
Mangruikar RS, et al. What is the role of the clinical “pearl.”
Am J Med
. 2002;
113(7):617–24. Ioannidis JPA, Lau J. Uncontrolled pearls, controlled evidence, meta-analysis and the individual patient.
J Clin Epidemiolo
. 1998;51(8):709–11.

31
Dr. André Lemierre, a physician in Paris, first described this disease in 1936:
Lemierre A. On certain septicemias due to anaerobic organisms.
Lancet
. 1936;1:701–3. Centor RM. Should Lemierre’s syndrome re-emergence change pharyngitis guidelines? Manuscript from author. Singhal A, Kerstein MD. Lemierre’s syndrome.
Medscape
. 2001;94(9):886–87.
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/410830
.

32
Like those presented to Fitzgerald:
Hunter KM.
Doctors’ Stories: The Narrative Structure of Medical Knowledge
. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991.

34
Anderson spent a year interviewing patients about their experiences in the health care setting:
Anderson A.
On the Other Side: African Americans Tell of Healing
. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2001.

Chapter 3: A Vanishing Art

39
A man in his fifties comes to an emergency room:
Jauhar S. The demise of the physical exam.
N Engl J Med
. 2006;354:548–551. 42
most of the doctors holding a post-residency fellowship:
Mangione M, Nieman LZ, Kaye D, Gracely E. The teaching and practice of cardiac auscultation during internal medicine and cardiology training: a nationwide survey.
Annal Int Med
. 1993;119(1):46–54.

42
If letter grades were being handed out:
Mangione S, Nieman LZ. Pulmonary auscultatory skills during training in internal medicine and family practice.
Am J Resp & Crit Care Med
. 1999;159(4 pt 1):1119–1124.

43
Residents, their teacher-physicians:
Vukanovic-Criley JM, Criley S, et al. Competency in cardiac examination skills in medical students, trainees, physicians and faculty.
Arch Int Med
. 2006;166:610–616.

43
Perhaps, Mangione suggests:
Mangione S. Teaching and practice of cardiac auscultation during internal medicine and cardiology training.
Ann Int Med
. 1993;119(1):47–54. Mangione S, Nieman L. Pulmonary auscultatory skills during training in internal medicine and family practice.
Am J
Resp Crit Care
. 1999;159:1119–1124. Mangione S, Duffy FD. The teaching of chest auscultation in primary care training: has anything changed in the 1990’s.
Chest
. 2003;124(4):1430–1436.

44
In 1980 the average length of stay:
Chassin MR. Variations in length of stay: their relationship to health outcomes. Report for the Office of Technical Assessment, U.S. Congress, Washington, D.C., 1983.

44
In a recent study done at Yale:
Private communication, John Moriarty, Associate Program Director, Yale Tradition, Internal Medicine Residency Program.

45
In 1950 approximately 15,000 people died of rheumatic heart disease:
http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4712
.

52
In a study published in 2002:
McGreevy KM, et al. Clinical breast examination—practices among women undergoing screening mammography.
Radiology
. 2002;24:555–559.

Chapter 4: What Only the Exam Can Show

56
The patient’s story contained the diagnostic tip-off:
Hampton JR, et al. Contribution of history-taking, physical examination and laboratory evaluation to diagnosis and management of medical outpatients.
BMJ
. 1975;2(5969):486–489. Sandler G. The importance of the history in the medical clinic and the cost of unnecessary tests.
Am Heart J
. 1980;100(pt 1):928–931.

56
When he couldn’t find a good answer:
Reilly BM. Physical examination in the care of medical inpatients: an observational study.
Lancet
. 2003;362:1100–1105.

Chapter 5: Seeing Is Believing

84
“If the patient’s normal appearance is preserved”:
From “Prognosis” in
Hippocratic Writings
. NY: Penguin Books, 1983, p. 171.

84
“By realizing and announcing beforehand”:
Ibid., p. 170.

88
The decision to either admit the patient:
Mellors JW, Horwitz RI, et al. A simple index to identify occult bacterial infection in adults with acute unexplained fever.
Arch Int Med
. 1987;147(4):666–671.

90
“I have trained myself”:
Doyle AC. “The Adventure of the Blanched Soldier,”
Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories
, vol. 1. NY: Bantam, 1986.

91
But the most important trait they shared:
Several sources were used in researching this: Klauder JV. Sherlock Holmes as a dermatologist.
Arch Derm Syphilology
. 1953;68(4):363–377. Reed J. A medical perspective on the adventures of Sherlock Holmes.
Med Humanit
. 2001;27:76–81. Massey EW. Joseph Bell MD—Mr. Sherlock Holmes?
South Med J
. 1980;73(12):1635–1636. Scarlett E P. The old original: notes on Dr. Joseph Bell whose personality and peculiar abilities suggested the creation of Sherlock Holmes.
Arch Int Med
. 1964;114:696–701. Conan Doyle dead from heart attack.
New York Times
, July 8, 1930. Wisser KM. The creation, reception and perpetuation of the Sherlock Holmes phenomenon 1887–1930. Master’s thesis, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 2000. Leibow E.
Dr Joe Bell: Model for Sherlock Holmes
. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green University Popular Press, 1982.

92
“From close observation and deduction”:
Leibow E.
Dr Joe Bell: Model for Sherlock Holmes
. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling Green University Popular Press, 1982.

94
These students also improved:
Dolev JC, Friedlaender LK, Braverman IM. Use of fine art to enhance visual diagnostic skills.
JAMA
. 2001;286 (9):1020–1021.

95
On a monitor I see six adults:
This video was conceived and produced by Daniel J. Simons, Associate Professor, University of Illinois, Visual Cognition Lab. Screen it for your friends by going to
http://viscog.beckman.uivc.edu/djs_lab/index.html
.

96
So did more than half:
Simons DJ, Chabris CF. Gorillas in our midst: sustained inattention blindness for dynamic events.
Perception
. 1999;28:1059–1074.

97
Researchers call this phenomenon:
Chun MM, Marois R. The dark side of visual attention.
Curr Op Neurobio
. 2002;12:184–189. Most SB, Scholl BJ, Clifford ER, Simons DJ. What you see is what you set: sustained inattentional blindness and the capture of awareness.
Psych Rev
. 2005;112(1):217–242.

106
Participants in the study were shown two pictures:
Kelley TA, et al. Effect of scene inversion on change detection of targets matched for visual salience.
Journal of Vision
. 2003;2:1–5.

Chapter 6: The Healing Touch

109
“It is the business of the physician”:
Adams CD, ed.
The Genuine
Works of Hippocrates
. NY: Dover, 1868, from
The Digital Hippocrates
,
http://www.chlt.org/sandbox/dh/Adams/page.160.a.php
.

112
The third that didn’t have the CT scan:
Musunuru S, Chen H, et al. Computed tomography in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis: definitive or detrimental
. J Gastrointest Surg
. 2007;11:1417–1422.

125
Mammographers agreed with one another:
Elmore JG, Wells CK, et al. Variations in radiologists’ interpretation of mammograms.
N Engl J Med
. 1994;331:1493–1499.

Chapter 7: The Heart of the Matter

133
“tip of the iceberg”:
Salvatore Mangione, personal communication.

136
“on account of the great degree of fatness”:
Nuland SB.
Doctors: The Biography of Medicine
. NY: Vintage Books, 1995, p. 220.

136
“I recalled a well known acoustic phenomenon”:
Duffin J.
To See with a Better Eye: The Life of RTH Laennec
. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998, p. 122.

137
They argued that diseases could be classified:
Ibid., p. 26.

139
It was usually attributed to heart failure:
I usually explain heart failure to my patients using a scene from
I Love Lucy
. In this episode, Lucy and her friend Ethel take jobs in a candy factory, wrapping candies as they move by on a conveyer belt. Initially they are able to keep up and all the candies end up neatly wrapped. As the conveyer belt picks up speed, more candies are delivered, and it becomes harder and harder to keep up. Before long the two are overwhelmed and candies end up everywhere—in their pockets, in their blouses, on the floor. What happens to Ethel and Lucy is analogous to what happens to the heart—with even the slightest physical stress, the weakened organ is overwhelmed by the amount of blood being brought in
and, like the overflowing candies, the extra fluid backs up, ending up just about everywhere.

139
the now classic finding of emphysema:
Duffin J.
To See with a Better Eye: The Life of RTH Laennec
. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998, pp. 157–58.

139
“oppression and palpitations”:
Major RH.
Classic Descriptions of Disease
. Springfield, IL: Charles C Thomas Publisher, 1932, pp. 371–372.

145
In one large multispecialty group in Boston:
Blanchard G P. Is listening through a stethoscope a dying art?
Boston Globe
, May 25, 2004.

146
five cardiologists were pitted against echocardiography:
Jaffe WM, et al. Clinical evaluation versus Doppler echocardiogram in the quantitative assessment of valvular heart disease.
Circulation
. 1988;78:267–275. 146
In a study done by Christine Attenhofer:
Attenhofer Jost CH, Turina J, Mayer K, Seifert B, Amann FW, Buechi M, et al. Echocardiography in the evaluation of systolic murmurs of unknown cause.
Am J Med
. 2000;108:614–620.

146
One study done of emergency room physicians:
Reichlin S, et al. Initial clinical evaluation of cardiac systolic murmurs in the ED by noncardiologist.
Am J Emerg Med
. 2004;22:71–75.

147
Several studies have been done evaluating programs:
Smith CA, et al. Teaching cardiac examination skills: a controlled trial of two methods.
J Gen Int Med
. 2006;21(1):1–6. Barrett MJ. Mastering cardiac murmurs: the power of repetition.
Chest
. 2004;126:470–475. Favrat B, et al. Teaching cardiac auscultation to trainees in internal medicine and family practice: does it work?
BMC Med Ed
. 2004;4:5.
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6920/4/5
.

161
“Direct observation of trainees”:
Holmboe ES, Hawkins RE. Evaluating the clinical competence of residents in internal medicine: a review.
Ann Int Med
. 1998;129:42–48.

162
A study published recently shows how inadequate:
Hicks CM, et al. Procedural experience and comfort level in internal medicine trainees.
J Gen Intern Med
. 2000;15:716–722.

Chapter 8: Testing Troubles

171
Furthermore, there is plenty of solid evidence:
Klempner MS, et al. Two controlled trials of antibiotic treatment in patients with persistent symptoms and a history of Lyme disease.
N Engl J Med
. 2001;345:85–92.

172
Finally, in October 1975:
Clark E. Lyme disease: one woman’s journey into tick country.
http://www.yankeemagazine.com/issues/2007-07/features/lymecountry
.

BOOK: Every Patient Tells a Story
11.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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