Procedure Station 1
Station 1
Taking blood…with a twist
Candidate Instructions
Setting:
You are an FY2 doctor working in A&E. This patient has presented with shortness of breath.
Mr Dennis Summers
Tasks:
1. Take a focussed history from the patient.
2. Take a blue and gold top blood bottle from the patient
3. Give your differential and preferred diagnosis with reasoning to the examiner.
4. Give your initial investigation and management plan to the examiner.
You are not required to examine the patient, you should take blood from the patient.
Simulated Patient Instructions
Briefing
Diagnosis: Infective exacerbation of COPD presenting with increasing shortness of breathYou are Dennis Summers (Age 74 years old)
You have come to the Emergency Department with increasing shortness of breath
Appearance and Behaviour
Whilst you aren't in a lot of pain you should act breathless and look worried..
Opening statement
“Well doctor, I’ve just haven’t been able to get my breath over the last week.”
Information to Give Freely
You have been coughing and bringing up more sputum than normal (you have COPD) over the last week and feeling generally unwell.
Presenting Complaint
Symptom - Increased sputum productionOnset - As above (last week)
Character:
Exacerbating factors - It’s present at rest but exertion does make it worse. No particular triggers that you’ve noticed
Alleviating factors - Your normal inhalers haven’t helped
Severity (ie impact on your life) - You used to be able to walk to the shops and back again but now you can’t that without getting out of breath. It’s gradually making you housebound.
Past Medical History
Previous episodes - NeverMedical conditions:
Drug History
Prescribed:Allergies - None
Family History
No family history of any conditions
Social History
Smoking - Smoked 35 a day for 40 years. Stopped 8 years agoAlcohol - 1 glass (250ml) of white wine on Saturdays and Sundays
Home:
Occupation - Retired lawyer. You’ve never had any occupational exposure to chemicals or dust as far as you’re aware
Baseline - You and your wife are both very happy at home. You’ve been married 52 years and enjoy spending time together playing board games and watching movies. You regularly get out to meet with friends.
Systems Review
General/red flags - You’ve had a fever over the last week but no weight loss or night sweatsNeuro - No stroke symptoms, fits, faints or visual changes
ENT - No dizziness, tinnitus or hearing loss
Resp - No symptoms aside from coughing up sputum and increasing breathlessness
Cardio - No arrhythmia, chest pain, swelling, or dizziness on exertion
GI - No D+V, vomiting blood or blood in your bowel motions
Urinary - No infective symptoms or blood
Joints - No history of fractures, joint pains
Ideas / Concerns / Expectation
Ideas - “Could it be to do with my COPD?”Concern - “That I won’t be able to leave the house to go to the shops or into town anymore”
Expectations - “Maybe you could give me a new inhaler to help with this?”
Discussion / Questions
After taking the history the candidate may explain that they need to take some blood from you to investigate what’s wrong.You should be receptive to this, but should ask if there are any risks associated with the procedure it if the candidate does not cover this themselves in their explanation. Aside from this you have no questions.
Start the Timer and Begin
Intro
History
Venepuncture
Differential diagnosis
Assessment and Management
Summary
Some clinical tips for getting difficult bloods :
Hang the patient’s arm out of the bed.
Leave the tourniquet on for a minute and have a chat before you look for veins - it takes a minute for the veins to fill and talking will ease both your and the patient’s nerves.
If the patient is dehydrated get them to drink 2 cups of water and return in 30 minutes.
A palpable vein is better than an easily visible vein that isn’t palpable.
Don’t be afraid to try twice, but escalate to your senior once you’ve had 2 attempts.
Submit for Scoring
Tags | Resp / respiratory | COPD | Venepuncture | Venipuncture | clinical skills
Station Written by: Dr Rishil Patel
Peer Reviewed by: Lorraine Brooks