(NZ) In this interview you are a speech pathologist in an outpatient clinic. You see new patients in order to conduct medical history. Your patient's name is Marty Graw. He is here today because he has been experiencing problems with swallowing.
Today's Goals
Your Goals for today are to:
Today, you will be interviewing Marty. He has come in to the clinic because he has been experiencing problems with swallowing. Assess his condition, address concerns and advise appropriate followup action.
Would you like a tutorial?
Never interacted with a virtual human before? This tutorial will teach you how to get started interacting with virtual humans.
Suggested Best Practices
Ask One Question at a Time
Try focusing only on one topic at a time
Avoid either/or questions: For example, Ask "Do you smoke?" and then ask "Do you drink?" instead of asking "Do you drink and/or smoke?"
Be Specific
Virtual humans can get confused when you use vague terms or questions with pronouns
If interviewing a patient about his symptoms, refer specifically to the symptom. For example, ask "Does the headache bother you?" instead of "Does it bother you?"
Stay on Topic
Virtual Humans can't talk about everything; however, with your interaction today, Marty Graw will improve for future interactions
Here's some useful information about Marty Graw to help give you a better idea of Marty Graw's current conversational scope
This patient has talked to hundreds of health professions students and has over 200 responses to almost 2700 questions. This patient can talk about topics in the areas of: • Chief complaint • History of present illness • Medical history • Family history • Social history
Getting Started
You should always first greet your patient.
After greeting, you should then find out the chief complaint.
For example, you could ask Marty Graw: "Tell me what brings you in today?"
After asking some open ended questions to understand why your patient is visiting you, you should then follow up with some closed-ended questions.
Above is a screenshot of a similar view of what your interaction with Marty Graw will look like. Take a minute or two to hover over the icons to get more info on how your interaction with Marty Graw will work.
Discoveries
To make progress in your interview, you need to make discoveries about Marty Graw.
Overall, there are 21 total discoveries
Interview Progress
By making discoveries, you complete stages of the interview
Stages and discoveries are color coded, so you will know which stage a discovery belongs to.
Your interaction with Marty Graw has 4 stages. They are:
History of Present Illness
Medical History
Patient Concerns
Diet and Eating Habits
Being Proficient
It's not required to find all 21 discoveries. You only need to find a certain amount per stage to be considered proficient
History of Present Illness
7 discoveries are
in this stage. 7 are important discoveries.7 important discoveries need
to be found to be proficient
Medical History
7 discoveries are
in this stage. 7 are important discoveries.7 important discoveries need
to be found to be proficient
Patient Concerns
5 discoveries are
in this stage. 5 are important discoveries.5 important discoveries need
to be found to be proficient
Diet and Eating Habits
2 discoveries are
in this stage. 2 are important discoveries.2 important discoveries need
to be found to be proficient
Finishing Your Interview
After you've completed your interview with Marty Graw, finish up by telling Marty Graw goodbye
To end your interview, look for the "Finished?" tab in the Digital Chart.
In this tab, you can click the "Go To Patient Assessment" button to summarize your findings to Marty Graw
Ready To Begin?
Great! You are now ready to begin your interview with Marty Graw!