chapter 17 The general check-up
MOTIVATORS
• They have a friend or family member recently diagnosed with a health problem such as a cancer, diabetes or a cardiac event.
HOW OFTEN?
How often a person should have a medical check-up depends on their age and general health status.
• Babies—should be opportunistically examined at the first encounter with a GP. This is often at the time of the first immunisation at 2 months, then again at 4 months, 6 months, 12 months and 18 months.
• Children and adolescents—preschoolers should have a comprehensive check-up every 6–12 months; older children and adolescents, once a year.
HISTORY
ELEMENTS OF THE HISTORY
Elements of the history are as follows:
• obstetric (female)—date of last normal menstrual period; frequency and duration of periods; obstetric history: number of pregnancies, deliveries (vaginal and caesarean), premature births, neonatal deaths, ectopic pregnancies, miscarriages, terminations, infertility, continence
• occupation(s)—present and past, including any occupational exposures to toxins, chemicals or pollutants
• family medical history—including age and cause of death of first- and second-degree relatives. Ask particularly about heart disease, asthma, diabetes, cancers and depression
• medication—prescription, OTC remedies and supplements and self-medication including dosage, frequency and route of administration. Women often need to be prompted about the oral contraceptive pill, many not viewing it as ‘medication’
• emotional health—moods; sleep pattern; relationships; attitude to work; signs of depression; level of satisfaction with job; family; friends; anxiety; use of alcohol, caffeine, tobacco or other drugs to alter mood
• sleep pattern—sleep latency, time of retiring to bed and waking, and total hours of sleep. Is it interrupted? Snoring or breathing pattern while sleeping, daytime sleeping and tiredness
• diet, nutrition—appetite, digestion, breakfast, snacks, lunch, dinner, fluid intake. For accuracy, this may require a food diary to be kept for several days to a week to indicate types and amounts of foods eaten
• for babies—feeding patterns and difficulties. Is the child breastfed? What formula if they are bottle-fed? Solids?
• smoking—past or current tobacco use. Did they ever smoke? How much and for how long? When did they quit? If still smoking, are they considering quitting?
• alcohol—frequency, type, amount (recorded as standard drinks per day and number of days per week or month)
• sexual history—current partner(s), new partner(s), previous sexual partner(s), previous testing for sexually transmissible infections, unprotected intercourse, sexual functioning, contraception
• immunisation—routine and travel vaccinations, with dosages and dates according to the relevant standard vaccination schedule
GENERAL PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
Despite some medical debate about its value, the comprehensive physical examination is a core clinical skill essential to the integrative approach to healthcare, described in the Medical Journal of Australia as ‘the doctor’s best kept secret—powerful, portable, fast, cheap, durable, reproducible and fun’.1 It is about confirming the normal and looking for the abnormal. It will interact with and complement the medical history, which will have revealed areas that may require special attention and is an absolute prerequisite to further investigation of symptoms and signs.