General examination
General examination
Clinical examination includes vision, hearing, percussion, and palpation combined with careful history and symptoms.
Academic materials
Clinical examination journal
Academic clinical examination research center
MCQ questions bank
- What is the clinical examination?
- How does cardiology help?
- What is the difference between clinical examination and investigation?
- How many questions are on the clinical exam?
- What comes under clinical examination?
A clinical examination comprises three components: the history, the examination, and the explanation, where the doctor discusses the nature and implications of the clinical findings. A patient seeks medical help for three main reasons: diagnostic purposes, treatment or reassurance, or a combination of these factors.
– Inspection (looking at the body)
– Palpation (feeling the body with fingers or hands)
– Auscultation (listening to sounds, usually with a stethoscope)
– Percussion (producing sounds, usually by tapping on specific areas of the body)
While clinical evaluation relies on holistic understanding, patient interaction, and symptom analysis, clinical investigation relies on scientific methodologies and technology to provide measurable results for accurate diagnosis and treatment.
The ASWB Exam (Bachelors, Masters, Advanced Generalist, or Clinical) includes 150 scored multiple-choice questions and 20 non-scored “pretest” questions. That’s a grand total of 170 questions you’ll encounter on exam day! The scored questions contribute to your final score.
Clinical examination is the first examination of all medical examination and treatment processes. The doctor will directly examine the patient through the basic clinical skills of seeing, touching, typing, listening,… to detect abnormal signs of the organs in the body.
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