Assessing And Diagnosing Patients With Mood Disorders

Accurately diagnosing depressive disorders can be challenging given their periodic and, at times, cyclic nature. Some of these disorders occur in response to stressors and, depending on the cultural history of the client, may affect their decision to seek treatment. Bipolar disorders can also be difficult to properly diagnose. While clients with a bipolar or related disorder will likely have to contend with the disorder indefinitely, many find that the use of medication and evidence-based treatments have favorable outcomes.

To Prepare:

  • Review this week’s Learning Resources. Consider the insights they provide about assessing and diagnosing mood disorders.
  • Download the Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation Template, which you will use to complete this Assignment. Also review the Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation Exemplar to see an example of a completed evaluation document.
  • By Day 1 of this week, select a specific video case study to use for this Assignment from the Video Case Selections choices in the Learning Resources. View your assigned video case and review the additional data for the case in the “Case History Reports” document, keeping the requirements of the evaluation template in mind.
  • Consider what history would be necessary to collect from this patient.
  • Consider what interview questions you would need to ask this patient.
  • Identify at least three possible differential diagnoses for the patient.

Complete and submit your Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation, including your differential diagnosis and critical-thinking process to formulate a primary diagnosis. Incorporate the following into your responses in the template:

  • Subjective: What details did the patient provide regarding their chief complaint and symptomology to derive your differential diagnosis? What is the duration and severity of their symptoms? How are their symptoms impacting their functioning in life?
  • Objective: What observations did you make during the psychiatric assessment?
  • Assessment: Discuss the patient’s mental status examination results. What were your differential diagnoses? Provide a minimum of three possible diagnoses with supporting evidence, listed in order from highest priority to lowest priority. Compare the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for each differential diagnosis and explain what DSM-5 criteria rules out the differential diagnosis to find an accurate diagnosis. Explain the critical-thinking process that led you to the primary diagnosis you selected. Include pertinent positives and pertinent negatives for the specific patient case.
  • Reflection notes: What would you do differently with this client if you could conduct the session over? Also include in your reflection a discussion related to legal/ethical considerations (demonstrate critical thinking beyond confidentiality and consent for treatment!), health promotion and disease prevention taking into consideration patient factors (such as age, ethnic group, etc.), PMH, and other risk factors (e.g., socioeconomic, cultural background, etc.).NRNP/PRAC 6635 Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation Exemplar

     

    INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO USE EXEMPLAR AND TEMPLATE—READ CAREFULLY

    If you are struggling with the format or remembering what to include, follow the Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation Template AND the Rubric as your guide. It is also helpful to review the rubric in detail in order not to lose points unnecessarily because you missed something required. Below highlights by category are taken directly from the grading rubric for the assignment in Weeks 4–10. After reviewing the full details of the rubric, you can use it as a guide.

    In the Subjective section, provide:

    · Chief complaint

    · History of present illness (HPI)

    · Past psychiatric history

    · Medication trials and current medications

    · Psychotherapy or previous psychiatric diagnosis

    · Pertinent substance use, family psychiatric/substance use, social, and medical history

    · Allergies

    · ROS

    · Read rating descriptions to see the grading standards!

    In the Objective section, provide:

    · Physical exam documentation of systems pertinent to the chief complaint, HPI, and history

    · Diagnostic results, including any labs, imaging, or other assessments needed to develop the differential diagnoses.

    · Read rating descriptions to see the grading standards!

    In the Assessment section, provide:

    · Results of the mental status examination, presented in paragraph form.

    · At least three differentials with supporting evidence. List them from top priority to least priority. Compare the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for each differential diagnosis and explain what DSM-5 criteria rules out the differential diagnosis to find an accurate diagnosis. Explain the critical-thinking process that led you to the primary diagnosis you selected. Include pertinent positives and pertinent negatives for the specific patient case .

    · Read rating descriptions to see the grading standards!

    Reflect on this case. Include: Discuss what you learned and what you might do differently. Also include in your reflection a discussion related to legal/ethical considerations ( demonstrate critical thinking beyond confidentiality and consent for treatment !), health promotion and disease prevention taking into consideration patient factors (such as age, ethnic group, etc.), PMH, and other risk factors (e.g., socioeconomic, cultural background, etc.).

    (The comprehensive evaluation is typically the initial new patient evaluation. You will practice writing this type of note in this course. You will be ruling out other mental illnesses so often you will write up what symptoms are present and what symptoms are not present from illnesses to demonstrate you have indeed assessed for all illnesses which could be impacting your patient. For example, anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, bipolar symptoms, psychosis symptoms, substance use, etc.) EXEMPLAR BEGINS HERE

    CC (chief complaint): A brief statement identifying why the patient is here. This statement is verbatim of the patient’s own words about why presenting for assessment. For a patient with dementia or other cognitive deficits, this statement can be obtained from a family member.

    HPI: Begin this section with patient’s initials, age, race, gender, purpose of evaluation, current medication and referral reason. For example:

    N.M. is a 34-year-old Asian male presents for psychiatric evaluation for anxiety. He is currently prescribed sertraline which he finds ineffective. His PCP referred him for evaluation and treatment.

    Or

    P.H., a 16-year-old Hispanic female, presents for psychiatric evaluation for concentration difficulty. She is not currently prescribed psychotropic medications. She is referred by her therapist for medication evaluation and treatment.

    Then, this section continues with the symptom analysis for your note. Thorough documentation in this section is essential for patient care, coding, and billing analysis.

    Paint a picture of what is wrong with the patient. First what is bringing the patient to your evaluation. Then, include a PSYCHIATRIC REVIEW OF SYMPTOMS. The symptoms onset, duration, frequency, severity, and impact. Your description here will guide your differential diagnoses. You are seeking symptoms that may align with many DSM-5 diagnoses, narrowing to what aligns with diagnostic criteria for mental health and substance use disorders.

    Past Psychiatric History: This section documents the patient’s past treatments. Use the mnemonic GChMP.

    General Statement: Typically, this is a statement of the patients first treatment experience. For example: The patient entered treatment at the age of 10 with counseling for depression during her parents’ divorce. OR The patient entered treatment for detox at age 26 after abusing alcohol since age 13.

    Caregivers are listed if applicable.

    Hospitalizations: How many hospitalizations? When and where was last hospitalization? How many detox? How many residential treatments? When and where was last detox/residential treatment? Any history of suicidal or homicidal behaviors? Any history of self-harm behaviors?

    Medication trials: What are the previous psychotropic medications the patient has tried and what was their reaction? Effective, Not Effective, Adverse Reaction? Some examples: Haloperidol (dystonic reaction), risperidone (hyperprolactinemia), olanzapine (effective, insurance wouldn’t pay for it)

    Psychotherapy or Previous Psychiatric Diagnosis: This section can be completed one of two ways depending on what you want to capture to support the evaluation. First, does the patient know what type? Did they find psychotherapy helpful or not? Why? Second, what are the previous diagnosis for the client noted from previous treatments and other providers. Thirdly, you could document both.

    Substance Use History: This section contains any history or current use of caffeine, nicotine, illicit substance (including marijuana), and alcohol. Include the daily amount of use and last known use. Include type of use such as inhales, snorts, IV, etc. Include any histories of withdrawal complications from tremors, Delirium Tremens, or seizures.

    Family Psychiatric/Substance Use History: This section contains any family history of psychiatric illness, substance use illnesses, and family suicides. You may choose to use a genogram to depict this information. Be sure to include a reader’s key to your genogram or write up in narrative form.

    Social History: This section may be lengthy if completing an evaluation for psychotherapy or shorter if completing an evaluation for psychopharmacology. However, at a minimum, please include:

    Where patient was born, who raised the patient

    Number of brothers/sisters (what order is the patient within siblings)

    Who the patient currently lives with in a home? Are they single, married, divorced, widowed? How many children?

    Educational Level

    Hobbies:

    Work History: currently working/profession, disabled, unemployed, retired?

    Legal history: past hx, any current issues?

    Trauma history: Any childhood or adult history of trauma?

    Violence Hx: Concern or issues about safety (personal, home, community, sexual (current & historical)

    Medical History: This section contains any illnesses, surgeries, include any hx of seizures, head injuries.

     

    Current Medications: Include dosage, frequency, length of time used, and reason for use. Also include OTC or homeopathic products.

    Allergies: Include medication, food, and environmental allergies separately. Provide a description of what the allergy is (e.g., angioedema, anaphylaxis). This will help determine a true reaction vs. intolerance.

    Reproductive Hx: Menstrual history (date of LMP), Pregnant (yes or no), Nursing/lactating (yes or no), contraceptive use (method used), types of intercourse: oral, anal, vaginal, other, any sexual concerns

    ROS: Cover all body systems that may help you include or rule out a differential diagnosis. Please note: THIS IS DIFFERENT from a physical examination!

    You should list each system as follows: General: HeadEENT: etc. You should list these in bullet format and document the systems in order from head to toe.

    Example of Complete ROS:

    GENERAL: No weight loss, fever, chills, weakness, or fatigue.

    HEENT: Eyes: No visual loss, blurred vision, double vision, or yellow sclerae. Ears, Nose, Throat: No hearing loss, sneezing, congestion, runny nose, or sore throat.

    SKIN: No rash or itching.

    CARDIOVASCULAR: No chest pain, chest pressure, or chest discomfort. No palpitations or edema.

    RESPIRATORY: No shortness of breath, cough, or sputum.

    GASTROINTESTINAL: No anorexia, nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea. No abdominal pain or blood.

    GENITOURINARY: Burning on urination, urgency, hesitancy, odor, odd color

    NEUROLOGICAL: No headache, dizziness, syncope, paralysis, ataxia, numbness, or tingling in the extremities. No change in bowel or bladder control.

    MUSCULOSKELETAL: No muscle, back pain, joint pain, or stiffness.

    HEMATOLOGIC: No anemia, bleeding, or bruising.

    LYMPHATICS: No enlarged nodes. No history of splenectomy.

    ENDOCRINOLOGIC: No reports of sweating, cold, or heat intolerance. No polyuria or polydipsia.

    Physical exam (If applicable and if you have opportunity to perform—document if exam is completed by PCP): From head to toe, include what you see, hear, and feel when doing your physical exam. You only need to examine the systems that are pertinent to the CC, HPI, and History. Do not use “WNL” or “normal.” You must describe what you see. Always document in head-to-toe format i.e., General: Head: EENT: etc.

    Diagnostic results: Include any labs, X-rays, or other diagnostics that are needed to develop the differential diagnoses (support with evidenced and guidelines).

    A ssessment

    Mental Status Examination: For the purposes of your courses, this section must be presented in paragraph form and not use of a checklist! This section you will describe the patient’s appearance, attitude, behavior, mood and affect, speech, thought processes, thought content, perceptions (hallucinations, pseudohallucinations, illusions, etc.)., cognition, insight, judgment, and SI/HI. See an example below. You will modify to include the specifics for your patient on the above elements—DO NOT just copy the example. You may use a preceptor’s way of organizing the information if the MSE is in paragraph form.

    He is an 8-year-old African American male who looks his stated age. He is cooperative with examiner. He is neatly groomed and clean, dressed appropriately. There is no evidence of any abnormal motor activity. His speech is clear, coherent, normal in volume and tone. His thought process is goal directed and logical. There is no evidence of looseness of association or flight of ideas. His mood is euthymic, and his affect appropriate to his mood. He was smiling at times in an appropriate manner. He denies any auditory or visual hallucinations. There is no evidence of any delusional thinking.   He denies any current suicidal or homicidal ideation. Cognitively, he is alert and oriented. His recent and remote memory is intact. His concentration is good. His insight is good.

    Differential Diagnoses: You must have at least three differentials with supporting evidence. Explain what rules each differential in or out and justify your primary diagnosis selection. You will use supporting evidence from the literature to support your rationale. Include pertinent positives and pertinent negatives for the specific patient case.

     

    Also included in this section is the reflection. Reflect on this case and discuss whether or not you agree with your preceptor’s assessment and diagnostic impression of the patient and why or why not. What did you learn from this case? What would you do differently?

    Also include in your reflection a discussion related to legal/ethical considerations (demonstrating critical thinking beyond confidentiality and consent for treatment!), health promotion and disease prevention taking into consideration patient factors (such as age, ethnic group, etc.), PMH, and other risk factors (e.g., socioeconomic, cultural background, etc.).

    References (move to begin on next page)

    You are required to include at least three evidence-based, peer-reviewed journal articles or evidenced-based guidelines which relate to this case to support your diagnostics and differentials diagnoses. Be sure to use correct APA 7th edition formatting.

     

     

    © 2021 Walden University Page 1 of 3

Establish policies and procedures for the enterprise

Question 1 (7) ANSWER IN 150 QUESTION WITH APA REFERENCES

The Methodist University Healthcare System recently added several, new applications to complement their Electronic Health Record (EHR). One of the applications is Computer Assisted Coding where Natural Language Text Processing (NLP) will be applied. Create a basic outline of how you plan to develop enterprise wide policies for collection, use, and maintenance of the health care data captured by this new application.

 

Assignment 1 (7) APA FORMAT

Innovative Applications

Instructions

The United Americas University Healthcare System recently added several, new applications to

complement their Electronic Health Record (EHR). One of the applications is Computer Assisted Coding

where Natural Language Text Processing (NLP) will be applied. Voice Recognition and document

imaging will also be applied as innovative data capture applications. As the Chief Information Compliance Office, your goal is to establish policies, procedures, and data architectural models for the

enterprise. To accomplish this, you plan to develop enterprise wide policies for collection,

use, and maintenance of the health care data captured by the new applications. You know

that this is imperative because the model that you select must enable decision-makers to

use the data appropriately and efficiently.

Requirements

Based on the Unit 7 Reading and your own research, create a detailed outline of how you

plan to carry out the following tasks in a 4 page document:

· Establish policies and procedures for the enterprise

· Establish data architectural models for the enterprise

· Develop enterprise wide policies for collection, use, and maintenance of health care

data

· Apply data capture technologies: Natural Language Text Processing (NLP), voice

recognition, document imaging

· Enable decision-makers to use data

QUESTION 2 (8) Answer in 150 words minimum, with apa reference

Imagine you are an HIM Compliance Manager for a large hospital system, and you are responsible for the integration new clinical data into your existing electronic health record (EHR). Discuss you preliminary steps for creating a data integration strategy that will ensure data are in a format that will satisfy the hospital’s integration needs.

 

 

ASSIGNMENT 2 (8)

Data Integration Standards

 

Instructions

Imagine you are an HIM Compliance Manager for a large hospital system, and you are

responsible for the integration new clinical data into your existing electronic health

record (EHR). During your research of clinical process modeling, you learned about how

healthcare data sets and dictionaries are used in the hospital settings. For example,

hospitals utilize the Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set (UHDDS) which is considered

a core data set for hospital reporting. The UHDDS contains a data dictionary where the

principle diagnosis, a data element, is defined along with its allowable value, an ICD-9-

CM code. Based on your knowledge, create a data integration strategy that will ensure

data are in a format that will satisfy the hospital’s integration needs. Utilize this unit’s

Readings and other resources found on the internet and the KU library.

Requirements

Your data integration strategy should be eight pages in length and cover all of the

following elements:

1. Ensure the standardization of data dictionaries to meet the needs of the

enterprise.

2. Demonstrate applicable clinical data standards theory and development.

3. Ensure data are in a format that will satisfy data integration needs:

· Interoperability

· Decision support

· Legacy systems

4. Describe clinical data and clinical process modeling:

· UML-Unified Modeling Language

· UP-Unified Process

 

 

 

 

 

Question 3 (9) Answer in 150 words or more with apa reference

Create a Health Informatics (HI) Compliance survey for hospitals to ensure their internal data dictionary requirements are in compliance with Joint Commission standards. Your survey should have at least 5 questions.

 

Assignment 3 (9)

Health Informatics Compliance Survey

Instructions

Part I: Create a Health Informatics (HI) Compliance survey for healthcare facilities to

ensure their internal data dictionary requirements are in compliance with standards and

regulations for Health informatics. All key regulatory agencies and accreditation entities

must be included in your survey: Joint Commission, HL-7, ASTM, NCQA, HEDIS, and

ACS.

Part II: You are the Chief Information Officer of a large hospital. You are tasked with

completing the HI Compliance survey. After answering all of the survey questions with

detailed explanations, determine if your hospital can ensure that (1) internal data

dictionary requirements are being met; (2) external data standards are being met; and

(3) the data format satisfies your hospital’s data integration needs.

Requirements

Part I: Your survey must have at least 20 questions that include all of the key regulatory

agencies and accreditation entities (Joint Commission, HL-7, ASTM, NCQA, HEDIS,

and ACS).

Part II: Your survey responses should be 5–6 pages in length.

Why do ants protect the aphids?

INTD 218, February 2021

Intimate Relations

For the over 400 million years they have been on dry land, insects have been interacting with plants and other animals to form a variety of alliances and partnerships. Many of these relationships are incredibly complicated. While some clearly benefit both partners, others are entirely one-sided in favor of the insect but always fascinating. Watch, learn and enjoy. As you move along in the documentary, answer this series of questions which enhance your enjoyment and education. The Answer to any one question must not exceed 20 words.

 

The Questions:

1. Why do ants protect the aphids?

 

 

2. How do ants protect their trees against leaf-eaters?

 

 

3. How do the ants protect against other intruding plants?

 

 

4. What happens when a wasp lays eggs in an acorn bud?

 

 

5. Why are there so may galls that look so different?

 

 

6. What arthropod has taken advantage of camouflage?

 

 

7. How does the Feather-legged bug attract ants?

 

 

8. How do stick insects get their eggs to a safe place?

 

 

9. Why do botflies need to use a courier for their eggs?

 

 

10. Why do so many insects lay their eggs in other creatures?

 

 

 

11. Why do the ants bring the blue butterfly larvae back to their den?

 

 

12. What makes the ants attack each other?

 

 

1

Human And Ecosystem

We all live in an ecosystem; a community of both living organisms and non-living elements interacting with each other. Humans have commonality with the other organisms in an ecosystem as we are composed of cells, cycle nutrients, get rid of waste and reproduce. But does the human body have similarities with an overall ecosystem?

Respond to the five topics below for this unit’s Discussion. Then, throughout the week, review your classmates’ posts and comment as appropriate on at least two other posts per the Discussion Guidelines.

  1. How does energy flow through an ecosystem? What is a producer, a consumer (primary and secondary) and a decomposer?
  2. How is the human body similar to an ecosystem? Provide a description of two ways in which the human body is similar to an ecosystem.
  3. Select two of the organ systems in the human body and describe their function. What role(s) do they play in maintaining the environment of the human body?
  4. Humans are consumers in the ecosystem. As part of our evolution, we have developed and urbanized many parts of the world affecting the habitat of other species. Select a city or town in the United States that has become urbanized and postulate or provide a supported example of how another species have adapted to the urban environment.
  5. Do you think that humans have a responsibility to protect the habitats of other species? What efforts do you recommend?