History-Taking

Author(s):  
Donald W. Winnicott

Chapter 1 of Clinical Notes on Disorders of Childhood. In this chapter, Winnicott argues for the importance of history taking in child medicine: the past history of the child, the family history, and the history of onset of the illness. He gives several cases which illustrate the value to the physician of taking the time to hear a full history.

2021 ◽  
pp. 104225872110465
Author(s):  
Bingbing Ge ◽  
Alfredo De Massis ◽  
Josip Kotlar

History is increasingly recognized as a distinctive source of competitive advantage for family businesses. Taking a rhetorical history perspective, we study how a family business leveraged the family’s three generations long history of entrepreneurship to sustain profitable growth over 16 years. Through our analysis, we identify three history scripting strategies—embedding, elaborating, and building family history—that created important sources of competitive advantage for the family business, facilitating acceptance by broader communities, building a reputation of continuity, and inspiring innovation through tradition. These findings advance the history-informed understanding of family firms’ idiosyncratic sources of superior performance.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1960 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-154
Author(s):  
George H. Schade ◽  
Helen Gofman

A complete family history as to the past seizures experienced by the patient or by members of his family may be revealing and helpful in establishing a diagnosis of abdominal epilepsy. In our study 19 of the 46 children revealed a past history of seizure state and 25 had experienced febrile seizures in infancy. Detailed consideration of the type of pain, its site, and allied symptoms should be evaluated carefully. Disorientation during an episode of pain followed by exhaustion and sleep is suggestive of abdominal epilepsy. Electroencephalography is usually helpful in supporting the clinical diagnosis of abdominal epilepsy. Discussion with the child and his parents, when practical and possible, in regard to the diagnosis and therapy, is recommended. Clarification and definition of the regimen and of the condition are essential, as the term "epilepsy" still carries a stigma to the lay person. Consideration of the patient and parental feelings and attitudes leads to understanding, co-operation, and ultimate success in the control of symptoms.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 105-120
Author(s):  
Yeni Asmara

The purpose of this study was to determine the history of learning with a contextual approach. This research is in the form of a Library Study (Library Research) as an effort to collect information and data by utilizing written sources in the library such as books, newspapers, magazines, documents that are relevant to the issues discussed. The results of the study, through learning history teachers can develop students' understanding of the past by learning that can connect between historical material with real situations around students, so students can describe past events as they are in history lessons. The innovation is known as contextual learning that has principles, principles in its application by linking the material learned with the real life of daily students, both within the family, school, community and citizens, with the aim to find meaning the material for his life.From the results of this study, it can be concluded that contextual learning can help students learn past history with real situations around them. Keywords: Learning, Contextual Approach


1992 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 577-585 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Douglas Sellman ◽  
Peter R. Joyce

Sixty-six alcoholic men who had been abstinent from alcohol for at least four weeks were assessed clinically and then investigated in terms of Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone (TSH) and prolactin responses to a Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone (TRH) challenge. Consistent with other studies, a third of the subjects had a blunted TSH response to TRH. This blunted response was not associated with a family history of alcoholism, or current depressive symptoms, past history of depression or family history of depression. However, subjects with a blunted TSH response were more likely to have had an earlier onset of alcoholism and to have had shorter alcoholic remissions in the past.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 498-504
Author(s):  
Stanford B. Friedman

EACH parent of a fatally ill child must adjust, in his own way, first to the threatened loss and then to the actual death of his child. The nature of this adjustment reflects, to varying degrees, the parent's mode of coping with past crises, his previous experiences with illness and death, and the idiosyncratic meaning this particular child may have to him. Thus, the physician can be of most help to the parents if he is aware of important landmarks in the history of the family and problems that they have had to face. His knowledge of previous patterns of family behavior in times of stress can aid him in encouraging parents along lines that have been successful in the past and in supporting attempts to adapt to the present situation. For many parents, this may be their first personal experience with death, and this may place additional demands and requests upon the physician. Unfortunately, such family history is usually not available to the physician who ultimately assumes the care of a fatally ill child. Furthermore, it is often difficult, and inadvisable, to obtain such information in detail at the time parents are preoccupied with an acute crisis. It therefore is useful for physicians to realize that there are many problems these parents face in common, and a number of studies have described more or less characteristic ways of reacting to them. This does not imply that stereotype behavior will be observed in parents sharing this common experience. However, if the physician is consciously aware of common modes of adjustment used by parents, he will be in the position of anticipating some of their needs, problems, and sources of anxiety.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 4700
Author(s):  
Michelle M. Monasky ◽  
Emanuele Micaglio ◽  
Giuseppe Ciconte ◽  
Ilaria Rivolta ◽  
Valeria Borrelli ◽  
...  

Genetic testing in Brugada syndrome (BrS) is still not considered to be useful for clinical management of patients in the majority of cases, due to the current lack of understanding about the effect of specific variants. Additionally, family history of sudden death is generally not considered useful for arrhythmic risk stratification. We sought to demonstrate the usefulness of genetic testing and family history in diagnosis and risk stratification. The family history was collected for a proband who presented with a personal history of aborted cardiac arrest and in whom a novel variant in the SCN5A gene was found. Living family members underwent ajmaline testing, electrophysiological study, and genetic testing to determine genotype-phenotype segregation, if any. Patch-clamp experiments on transfected human embryonic kidney 293 cells enabled the functional characterization of the SCN5A novel variant in vitro. In this study, we provide crucial human data on the novel heterozygous variant NM_198056.2:c.5000T>A (p.Val1667Asp) in the SCN5A gene, and demonstrate its segregation with a severe form of BrS and multiple sudden deaths. Functional data revealed a loss of function of the protein affected by the variant. These results provide the first disease association with this variant and demonstrate the usefulness of genetic testing for diagnosis and risk stratification in certain patients. This study also demonstrates the usefulness of collecting the family history, which can assist in understanding the severity of the disease in certain situations and confirm the importance of the functional studies to distinguish between pathogenic mutations and harmless genetic variants.


1877 ◽  
Vol 25 (171-178) ◽  

George Poulett Scrope. It is scarcely possible at the present day to realize the conditions of that intellectual “reign of terror” which prevailed at the commencement of the present century, as the consequence of the unreasoning prejudice and wild alarm excited by the early progress of geological inquiry. At that period, every attempt to explain the past history of the earth by a reference to the causes still in operation upon it was met, not by argument, but by charges of atheism against its propounder; and thus Hutton’s masterly fragment of a ‘Theory of the Earth,’ Playfair’s persuasive‘ Illustrations,’ and Hall’s records of accurate observation and ingenious experiment had come to be inscribed m a social Index Expurgatorius ,and for a while, indeed, might have seemed to be consigned to total oblivion. Equally injurious suspicions were aroused against the geologist who dared to make allusion to the important part which igneous forces have undoubtedly played in the formation of certain rocks; for the authority of Werner had acquired an almost sacred cha­racter; and “ Vulcanists ” and “ Huttonians ” were equally objects of aversion and contempt. To two men who have very recently—and within a few months of one another—passed away from our midst, science is indebted for boldly en­countering and successfully overcoming this storm of prejudice. Hutton and his friends lived a generation too soon ; and thus it was reserved tor Lyell and Scrope to carry out the task which the great Scotch philosopher had failed to accomplish, namely, the removal of geology from the domain of speculation to that of inductive science.


2021 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyo Geun Choi ◽  
Wook Chun ◽  
Kuk Hyun Jung

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document