|
- 2016
Teaching Patient-Centered Safety-Netting in Primary Care | OMICS InternationalDOI: 10.4172/2161-0711.1000447 Keywords: Primary care, Safety-netting advice, Models of illness, Safe practice, Protective medicine, omics, open access, omics publishing group, open access publisher, open access publishers, open access publications, open access journals, open access artcles, omics group, omicsonline Abstract: In primary care, it is common for patients to present during the early stages of illness with non-specific symptoms, at which time the positive clinical findings in the history and examination that enable a clinician to make a firm diagnosis, or to discriminate between a serious and minor illness, may not have developed. Where diagnostic uncertainty exists, there is a need for the doctor to provide safety-netting advice so as to reduce the risk of misdiagnosis inherent in making a diagnosis at this early stage in the patient’s illness. It is important that medical students and junior doctors learn the principles and practices of safety-netting, including the patient’s perspective of why safety-netting advice is required and how best to communicate this advice to the patient in a way that is comprehensible to them. This article discusses how simple visual models can be used in the teaching of safetynetting skills to help discuss the rationale for safety-netting with the patient
|