• B: behaviour – Always treat patients with kindness and
• C: compassion – Recognise the human story that
• D: dialogue – Listen to and acknowledge the patient.
As a student and as a healthcare professional, you will be
given private and intimate information about patients and their
families. This information is confidential, even after a patient’s
death. This is a general rule, although its legal application varies
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The importance of a clear history 10
The history of the presenting symptoms 11
Social history and lifestyle 14
Patients with communication difficulties 16
Patients with cognitive difficulties 16
Emotional or angry patients 16
10 • General aspects of history taking
The way you ask a question is important:
• Open questions are general invitations to talk that avoid
anticipating particular answers: for example, ‘What was
the first thing you noticed when you became ill?’ or ‘Can
• Closed questions seek specific information and are used
for clarification: for example, ‘Have you had a cough
today?’ or ‘Did you notice any blood in your bowel
Both types of question have their place, and normally clinicians
move gradually from open to closed questions as the interview
The following history illustrates the mix of question styles
needed to elucidate a clear story:
When did you first feel unwell, and what did you
Well, I’ve been getting this funny feeling in my chest
over the last few months. It’s been getting worse and
worse but it was really awful this morning. My husband
called 999. The ambulance came and the nurse said I
was having a heart attack. It was really scary.
When you say a ‘funny feeling’, can you tell me
more about what it felt like? (Open questioning,
steering away from events and opinions back to
Well, it was here, across my chest. It was sort of tight,
like something heavy sitting on my chest.
And did it go anywhere else? (Open but clarifying)
Well, maybe up here in my neck.
What were you doing when it came on? (Clarifying
Just sitting in the kitchen, finishing my breakfast.
How long was the tightness there? (Closed)
So, you felt a tightness in your chest this morning
that went on for about an hour and you also felt it
Did you feel anything else at the same time?
(Open, not overlooking secondary symptoms)
Showing empathy when taking a history
Being empathic helps your relationship with patients and improves
their health outcomes (p. 5). Try to see the problem from their
point of view and convey that to them in your questions.
Consider a young teacher who has recently had disfiguring
facial surgery to remove a benign tumour from her upper jaw.
Her wound has healed but she has a drooping lower eyelid and
facial swelling. She returns to work. Imagine how you would feel
in this situation. Express empathy through questions that show
you can relate to your patient’s experience.
So, it’s 3 weeks since your operation. How is your
OK, but I still have to put drops in my eye.
And what about the swelling under your eye?
That gets worse during the day, and sometimes by the
afternoon I can’t see that well.
The importance of a clear history
Understanding the patient’s experience of illness by taking a
history is central to the practice of all branches of medicine.
The process requires patience, care and understanding to yield
the key information leading to correct diagnosis and treatment.
In a perfect situation a calm, articulate patient would clearly
describe the sequence and nature of their symptoms in the order
of their occurrence, understanding and answering supplementary
questions where required to add detail and certainty. In reality a
multitude of factors may complicate this encounter and confound
the clear communication of information. This chapter is a guide
to facilitating the taking of a clear history. Information on specific
symptoms and presentations is covered in the relevant system
Read your patient’s past records, if they are available, along with
any referral or transfer correspondence before starting.
Consultation length varies. In UK general practice the average
time available is 12 minutes. This is usually adequate, provided the
doctor knows the patient and the family and social background.
In hospital, around 10 minutes is commonly allowed for returning
outpatients, although this is challenging for new or temporary
staff unfamiliar with the patient. For new and complex problems
a full consultation may take 30 minutes or more. For students,
time spent with patients learning and practising history taking
is highly valuable, but patients appreciate advance discussion
Introduce yourself and anyone who is with you, shaking hands
if appropriate. Confirm the patient’s name and how they prefer
to be addressed. If you are a student, inform patients; they are
usually eager to help. Write down facts that are easily forgotten,
such as blood pressure or family tree, but remember that writing
notes must not interfere with the consultation.
Using different styles of question
Begin with open questions such as ‘How can I help you
today?’ or ‘What has brought you along to see me today?’
Listen actively and encourage the patient to talk by looking
interested and making encouraging comments, such as ‘Tell me
a bit more.’ Always give the impression that you have plenty of
time. Allow patients to tell their story in their own words, ideally
without interruption. You may occasionally need to interject to
guide the patient gently back to describing the symptoms, as
anxious patients commonly focus on relating the events or the
reactions and opinions of others surrounding an episode of illness
rather than what they were feeling. While avoiding unnecessary
repetition, it may be helpful occasionally to tell patients what
you think they have said and ask if your interpretation is correct
increases the likelihood of lung cancer and chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD). Chest pain does not exclude COPD
since he could have pulled a muscle on coughing, but the pain
may also be pleuritic from infection or thromboembolism. In
turn, infection could be caused by obstruction of an airway by
lung cancer. Haemoptysis lasting 2 months greatly increases the
chance of lung cancer. If the patient also has weight loss, the
positive predictive value of all these answers is very high for lung
cancer. This will focus your examination and investigation plan.
What was the first thing you noticed wrong when
you became ill? (Open question)
I’ve had a cough that I just can’t get rid of. It started
after I’d had flu about 2 months ago. I thought it would
get better but it hasn’t and it’s driving me mad.
Could you please tell me more about the cough?
Well, it’s bad all the time. I cough and cough, and
bring up some phlegm. It keeps waking me at night so
I feel rough the next day. Sometimes I get pains in my
chest because I’ve been coughing so much.
Already you have noted ‘Cough’, ‘Phlegm’ and
‘Chest pain’ as headings for your history. Follow up
with key questions to clarify each.
Cough: Are you coughing to try to clear something
from your chest or does it come without warning?
Oh, I can’t stop it, even when I’m asleep it comes.
Does it feel as if it starts in your throat or your
chest? Can you point to where you feel it first?
It’s like a tickle here (points to upper sternum).
Phlegm: What colour is the phlegm? (Closed
question, focusing on the symptom)
And how does that feel at work?
Well, it’s really difficult. You know, with the kids and
everything. It’s all a bit awkward.
I can understand that that must feel pretty
uncomfortable and awkward. How do you cope?
Are there are any other areas that are awkward for
you, maybe in other aspects of your life, like the
The history of the presenting symptoms
Using these questioning tools and an empathic approach, you
are now ready to move to the substance of the history.
Ask the patient to think back to the start of their illness and
describe what they felt and how it progressed. Begin with some
open questions to get your patient talking about the symptoms,
gently steering them back to this topic if they stray into describing
events or the reactions or opinions of others. As they talk, pick
out the two or three main symptoms they are describing (such
as pain, cough and shivers); these are the essence of the history
of the presenting symptoms. It may help to jot these down as
single words, leaving space for associated clarifications by closed
questioning as the history progresses.
Experienced clinicians make a diagnosis by recognising
patterns of symptoms (p. 362). With experience, you will refine
your questions according to the presenting symptoms, using
a mental list of possible diagnoses (a differential diagnosis) to
guide you. Clarify exactly what patients mean by any specific
term they use (such as catarrh, fits or blackouts); common terms
can mean different things to different patients and professionals
(Box 2.1). Each answer increases or decreases the probability
of a particular diagnosis and excludes others.
In the following example, the patient is a 65-year-old male
smoker. His age and smoking status increase the probability
of certain diagnoses related to smoking. A cough for 2 months
2.1 Examples of terms used by patients that should be clarified
Patient’s term Common underlying problems Useful distinguishing features
Allergy True allergy (immunoglobulin E-mediated reaction) Visible rash or swelling, rapid onset
Intolerance of food or drug, often with nausea or
Predominantly gastrointestinal symptoms
Indigestion Acid reflux with oesophagitis Retrosternal burning, acid taste
Site and nature of discomfort:
Epigastric, relieved by eating
Arthritis Joint pain Redness or swelling of joints
Immobility due to prior skeletal injury Deformity at site
Catarrh Purulent sputum from bronchitis Cough, yellow or green sputum
Infected sinonasal discharge Yellow or green nasal discharge
Nasal blockage Anosmia, prior nasal injury/polyps
Fits Transient syncope from cardiac disease Witnessed pallor during syncope
Epilepsy Witnessed tonic/clonic movements
Abnormal involuntary movement No loss of consciousness
Dizziness Labyrinthitis Nystagmus, feeling of room spinning, with no other neurological deficit
Syncope from hypotension History of palpitation or cardiac disease, postural element
Cerebrovascular event Sudden onset, with other neurological deficit
12 • General aspects of history taking
Having clarified the presenting symptoms, prompt for any
more associated features, using your initial impression of the
likely pathology (lung cancer or chronic respiratory infection) to
Do you ever feel short of breath with your cough?
How has your weight been? (Seeking additional
confirmation of serious pathology)
I’ve lost about a stone since this started.
The questions required at this point will vary according to the
system involved. A summary of useful starting questions for each
system is shown in Box 2.3. Learn to think, as you listen, about
the broad categories of disease that may present and how these
relate to the history, particularly in relation to the onset and rate
of progression of symptoms (Box 2.4).
To complete the history of presenting symptoms, make an
initial assessment of how the illness is impacting on the life of
your patient. For example, breathlessness on heavy exertion
may prevent a 40-year-old builder from working but would have
much less impact on a sedentary retired person. ‘Can you tell
me how far you can walk on a good day?’ is a question that
can help to clarify the normal level of functioning, and ‘How
has this changed since you have been unwell?’ can reveal
disease impact. Ask if the person undertakes sports or regular
exercise, and if they have modified these activities because
Have you ever coughed up any blood? (Closed
When did it first appear and how often does it
Oh, most days. I’ve noticed it for over a month.
How much? (Closed question, clarifying the
Is it pure blood or mixed with yellow or green
Just streaks of blood in clear phlegm.
Chest pain: Can you tell me about the chest pains?
Well, they’re here on my side (points) when I cough.
Does anything else bring on the pains? (Open,
Taking a deep breath, and it really hurts when I cough
Pain is a very important symptom common to many areas of
practice. A general scheme for the detailed characterisation of
2.2 Characteristics of pain (SOCRATES)
• Somatic pain, often well localised, e.g. sprained ankle
• Visceral pain, more diffuse, e.g. angina pectoris
• Speed of onset and any associated circumstances
• Described by adjectives, e.g. sharp/dull, burning/tingling, boring/
stabbing, crushing/tugging, preferably using the patient’s own
description rather than offering suggestions
• Referred by a shared neuronal pathway to a distant unaffected site, e.g.
diaphragmatic pain at the shoulder tip via the phrenic nerve (C3, C4)
• Visual aura accompanying migraine with aura
• Numbness in the leg with back pain suggesting nerve root irritation
Timing (duration, course, pattern)
• If episodic, duration and frequency of attacks
• If continuous, any changes in severity
Exacerbating and relieving factors
• Circumstances in which pain is provoked or exacerbated, e.g. eating
• Specific activities or postures, and any avoidance measures that
have been taken to prevent onset
• Effects of specific activities or postures, including effects of
medication and alternative medical approaches
• Difficult to assess, as so subjective
• Sometimes helpful to compare with other common pains, e.g.
• Variation by day or night, during the week or month, e.g. relating to
2.3 Questions to ask about common symptoms
Cardiovascular Do you ever have chest pain or tightness?
Do you ever wake up during the night feeling
Have you ever noticed your heart racing or
Respiratory Are you ever short of breath?
Have you had a cough? If so, do you cough
Have you ever coughed up blood?
Gastrointestinal Are you troubled by indigestion or heartburn?
Have you noticed any change in your bowel habit
Have you ever seen any blood or slime in your
Genitourinary Do you ever have pain or difficulty passing urine?
Do you have to get up at night to pass urine? If
Have you noticed any dribbling at the end of
Have your periods been quite regular?
Musculoskeletal Do you have any pain, stiffness or swelling in
Do you have any difficulty walking or dressing?
Endocrine Do you tend to feel the heat or cold more than
Have you been feeling thirstier or drinking more
Neurological Have you ever had any fits, faints or blackouts?
Have you noticed any numbness, weakness or
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