This book follows the revised format of the Practical Assessment Clinical Examination Skills (PACES) exam conducted by the Royal College of Physicians in the UK, where 'clinical consultation skills' will be tested twice in two separate stations. Thus, coming closest to what doctors do in real life: obtain a structured history, perform a focused examination, and explain the problem to the patient in lay terms. This book takes readers through a rational approach to sixty common presenting symptoms or laboratory abnormalities in medicine. It improves the clinical consultation skills of young doctors and prepares them for the new format of MRCP PACES. Readers will learn:
1. The approaches to common presenting symptoms and blood test abnormalities.
2. What questions to ask the patient and why.
3. What to check when they examine the patient.
4. What to tell the patient and how to convey this information in lay terms without jargon.
5. How to investigate the problem, how to manage and when to refer to a specialist.
Key Features:
- Follows a narrative with each case being discussed in a story-like manner, helping readers understand the process of narrowing the differential diagnosis, just like solving a crime!
- Includes a 'What to tell the patient', section, where the main points to convey to the patient are highlighted, and fully dialogued to help readers understand how complex medical jargon should be conveyed in lay terms.
- Simplifies several complex and difficult-to-understand topics like hematological malignancies, thrombotic microangiopathy, glomerulonephritis, systemic vasculitis, eosinophilia.]
About the Author: Dr Suresh is currently the Head of Medicine at Ng Teng Fong General Hospital in Singapore. Over the last three decades, he has worked in three different countries with contrasting healthcare systems and cultures. He has been teaching MRCP candidates for over two decades, and received more than a dozen teaching excellence awards in the last ten years alone. He has regularly published educational review articles on a wide range of topics in peer-reviewed internal medicine journals, and written an acute medicine handbook to guide the junior doctors in his hospital.