Well child SOAP note- TEENAGER 16 y
Please see the attachment for the instructions
Please see the attachment for the instructions
Module 03 Written Assignment – Health History
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Module 03 Content
1.
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This assignment is due no later than Sunday October 22nd at 11:59pm
Conduct a health history on a family member or friend.
You can use the form located in your Health Assessment lab manual book or from Week Two classroom assignment.
You do not need to submit the health history form with your paper.
Be sure they give you permission. Using the interviewing techniques learned in Module 2,
gather the following information. Use your textbook as your guide.
· Present Health
· Past Medical Health
· Family History
· Review of Systems
While this is only a partial health history, summarize in 3 -5 pages the information you gathered.
Include your answers to the following questions in the summary:
a. Was the person willing to share the information? If they were not, what did you do to encourage them?
b. Was there any part of the interview that was more challenging? If so, what part and how did you deal with it?
c. How comfortable were you taking a health history?
d. What interviewing techniques did you use? Were there any that were difficult and if so, how did you overcome the difficulty?
e. Now that you have taken a health history discuss how this information can assist the nurse in determining the health status of a client.
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Quality Improvement
Instructions
· Use the following steps to apply quality improvement principles in your current clinical situation.
· Identify a process or procedure that you perform routinely and wish to improve.
· Using a flowchart, delineate each step of the procedure.
· Identify the step in the flowchart where you would insert a change for quality improvement.
· Design a new flowchart that now shows the improved process.
· This paper requires the use of at least one professional resource.
· You will need:
· An introductory paragraph which explains what you would like to improve
· Another paragraph which explains the step where you hope to change the pattern and insert a quality improvement process
· Another paragraph explaining the new flow after you make the change.
· Please add a cover page with the title of your Quality Improvement project.
Resource: Flowcharts are easily made in Microsoft Word. Here is a video explaining the process:
Unit 3 Discussion – ICD-10 Codes. Due 7-25-23. 1000words. 4 references
1. Why is accurate coding using the ICD-10-CM important?
2. Use your lecture materials to determine what ICD-10 Codes to assign for this patient encounter.
3. In paragraph form, construct a discussion that supports the Codes you identified.
4. In the discussion explore how the ICD-10 Codes that you assigned impact third party payor reimbursement for this visit.
5. Summarize an article that pertains to ICD-10-CM
Responses need to address all components of the question, demonstrate critical thinking and analysis and include peer-reviewed journal evidence to support the student’s position.
Please be sure to validate your opinions and ideas with in-text citations and corresponding references in APA format.
Please review the rubric to ensure that your response meets the criteria.
Chief Complaint:
Older sister reports – “Our mother died three weeks ago and we lost our father several months ago. I think that my sister was depressed and just wanted to be with them.”
History of Present Illness:
31-year-old female who was brought to the hospital by ambulance. She was found slumped over in her car in front of the funeral home where memorial services for both her father and mother had recently been held. On the seat beside her were two empty bottles of sleeping pills, a Bible opened to Psalm 23, and a note that read
: “I am going to be with mom and dad. It is just too sad being here anymore without them. I love you all and you will be in my prayers.” When she was found by the funeral home director her hair was oily and unkempt and she smelled as if she had not bathed in a long time. She was wearing a dirty orange T-shirt and jeans.
PMH:
Depression when she was a junior in HS which led to psychiatric admissions at 15 and 19 years of age. For these admissions she was treated with antidepressants and psychotherapy. Length of stay for both admissions was approximately 5 weeks. At age 19, following a suicide attempt, she met her first husband in the psych ward of the hospital. Diagnosed with bipolar disorder 6 years ago.
Information from Sister:
Older sister reports ‘hard life’. Reports both parents were alcoholics. Parents would go to bars almost every night and leave the 8 children in the care. The children were eventually removed from the home. Some of the children went to the Catholic girls’ home others were placed in “horrible” foster homes where they were subjected to physical and sexual abuse.
Reports numerous siblings, including the patient, have been through several detoxification centers for alcohol abuse.
Patient is in her second marriage with 3 daughters – 2 from the first marriage and 1 from the current marriage.
Reports that after having her third baby the patient went into a ‘terrible depression’. The patient was under the care of a psychiatrist for this depression and was placed on an anti-depressant after about 3 months of being under the psychiatrist’s care. After 3 weeks of being on this anti-depressant the patient is reported as having gotten ‘really weird’; patient was staying up all night pacing around her house and talking to people on the phone, she would go on shopping sprees for 2-3 days at a time and max out all her credit cards. The patient finally crashed and was taken to the hospital by her family and it was during this admission, 6 years ago, that the patient was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Sister reports the patient has been on Lithium since being diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
Reports their father had been sick for a while so his death was not unexpected. However, their mother went downhill fast and the patient is reported to not cope well with the mother’s illness/death.
Reports the patient hadn’t been eating lately with noted weight loss. Additionally, the sister reports the patient had been smoking and drinking ‘more than usual’ lately.
Family Hx:
Paternal grandmother – depression
Two maternal aunts – bipolar disorder
Mother and father – alcohol abuse
Father died from pancreatic cancer
Mother died from heart failure
3 living brothers, 3 living sisters, one deceased brother who had an AMI at age 34
Social Hx:
Divorced and remarried
Worked as a nurse’s aid and health insurance claims adjuster
Attends church regularly
Smoked 1ppd for 15 years
History of alcohol abuse with several DWI violations
History of IV drug use, not in the last 10 years
ROS:
Information from sister:
Neuro – history of migraine headaches since late teens, takes Imitrex prn
SIGECAPS:
Sister reports: at times the patient is up all night – particularly when bipolar symptoms not well controlled, the patient seemed to be more depressed since the loss of their mother, does not believe the patient felt guilty surviving parents, patient has been not been attentive to her personal hygiene, the patient appeared to be obsessing on parental loss, patient appeared to be losing weight and therefore suspect she was not eating well, patient seemed to not be engaging in typical daily activities; patient had not expressed having suicidal ideations, had not expressed homicidal ideations
Medications:
Lithium 600mg po Q AM and 600mg po Q HS
Sumatriptan 50-200mg po PRN
Allergies:
ASA – swelling of face
Physical Examination:
General – lethargic and slow to respond to questions; BP 110/72, P 66, RR 12, T 97.0, SpO2 on RA 95%, Ht 66 in, Wt 135 lbs, BMI 21.8
Integument – skin pale, warm, dry; good turgor; several cystic lesions on chin; no rashes, ecchymoses or petechiae noted
HEENT – Head is normocephalic and atraumatic, pupils dilated with sluggish reaction to light, TMs gray and shiny bilateral, nares patent without discharge noted, no tonsillar enlargement, moist mucous membranes
Neck – supple without adenopathy, no thyromegaly
Lungs – CTA
Breasts – deferred
Cardiovascular – heart with RRR without murmur/gallop, multiple varicosities noted bilateral lower extremities
Abdomen – soft, non-distended, active bowel sounds, non-tender, no organomegaly
Genitalia/Rectum – deferred
Musculoskeletal – no major limitations of ROM or gross abnormalities noted
Neurologic – oriented to person, DTRs 2+ and equal bilateral, no localizing signs, CN II- XII grossly intact
Diagnostics – Na 139 meq/L, K 3.7 meq/L, Cl 108 meq/L, HCO3 23 meq/L, Bun 10 mg/dL, Cr 0.7 mg/dL, fasting Glu 102 mg/dL, Ca 8.7 mg/dL, PO4 3.2 mg/dL, Protein 4.8 g/dL, Mg 2.0 mg/dL, AST 33 IU/L, ALT 20 IU/L, GGT 82 IU/L, Alb 2.9 g/dL, TSH 4.1, Vit B12 203 pg/mL, Hgb 12.2 g/dL, HCT 36.8 %;
Lithium 0.08meq/L
Urine dipstick – 6.3 pH, SG 1.021, all other parameters negative
Assessment:
You will be evaluating the subjective and objective data sets to determine the diagnoses for this patient encounter.
Plan:
The plan cannot be developed until the diagnoses are assigned.
1. Practical Skills to Master Academia
2. Online Learning
2
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The client is a 46-year-old white male who works as a welder at a local steel fabrication factory. He presents today after being referred by his PCP after a trip to the emergency room in which he felt he was having a heart attack. He stated that he felt chest tightness, shortness of breath, and feeling of impending doom. He does have some mild hypertension (which is treated with low sodium diet) and is about 15 lbs. overweight. He had his tonsils removed when he was 8 years old, but his medical history since that time has been unremarkable. Myocardial infarction was ruled out in the ER and his EKG was normal. Remainder of physical exam was WNL.
He admits that he still has problems with tightness in the chest and episodes of shortness of breath- he now terms these “anxiety attacks.” He will also report occasional feelings of impending doom, and the need to “run” or “escape” from wherever he is at.
In your office, he confesses to occasional use of ETOH to combat worries about work. He admits to consuming about 3-4 beers/night. Although he is single, he is attempting to care for aging parents in his home. He reports that the management at his place of employment is harsh, and he fears for his job. You administer the HAM-A, which yields a score of 26.
Client has never been on any type of psychotropic medication.
MENTAL STATUS EXAM
The client is alert, oriented to person, place, time, and event. He is appropriately dressed. Speech is clear, coherent, and goal-directed. Client’s self-reported mood is “bleh” and he does endorse feeling “nervous”. Affect is somewhat blunted, but does brighten several times throughout the clinical interview. Affect broad. Client denies visual or auditory hallucinations, no overt delusional or paranoid thought processes readily apparent. Judgment is grossly intact, as is insight. He denies suicidal or homicidal ideation.
You administer the Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAM-A) which yields a score of 26.
Diagnosis: Generalized anxiety disorder
RESOURCES
§ Hamilton, M. (1959). Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale. Psyctests, doi:10.1037/t02824-0
Decision Point One
Begin Paxil 10 mg po daily
Begin Imipramine 25 mg po BID
Begin Buspirone 10 mg po BID
response to your Blog describing your own experiences with intra- and interdisciplinary collaboration in your nursing practice. What were the strengths and weaknesses of this collaboration? How might your own experiences mirror the perspectives and viewpoints presented in the Henry et al. (2018) case study design approach? Be specific and provide examples.
A patient who has Parkinson’s disease takes levodopa and carbidopa. The patient reports experiencing tremors between doses. The primary care NP should:
a. add amantadine.
b. increase the dose of levodopa.
c. discontinue the carbidopa.
d. add entacapone.
2.
A patient who takes levodopa and carbidopa for Parkinson’s disease reports experiencing freezing episodes between doses.The primary care NP should consider using:
a. selegiline.
b. apomorphine.
c. modified-release levodopa.
d. amantadine.
3.
A 65-year-old patient is diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. The patient has emphysema and narrow-angle glaucoma. The primary care NP should consider beginning therapy with:
a. ropinirole hydrochloride.
b. selegiline.
c. carbidopa/levodopa.
d. benztropine.
Can you help me with my homework.
identify the process for decision-making regarding technology. You will also discuss the nursing role in identifying appropriate technology for practice.
identify the process for decision making regarding technology. Discuss nursing role in identifying appropriate technology for practice.
should include the following:
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