Difference between revisions of "Dizziness"
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''Patient: I'd like a new doctor, please.'' | ''Patient: I'd like a new doctor, please.'' | ||
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+ | '''Additional Topics''' | ||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | - [[Anger Management]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | - [[Burnout]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | - [[Dizzy Gillespie]] | ||
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+ | - [[ICD-10]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | [[Category:Symptoms]] | ||
[[Category:Administration & Paperwork]] | [[Category:Administration & Paperwork]] |
Revision as of 18:25, 17 March 2017
Dizziness cannot happen without giddiness, as the ICD-10 code R42 stands for "dizziness and giddiness." If a patient presents with dizziness, be sure your line of questioning is appropriate.
How to Talk to a Patient with Dizziness
Doctor: What seems to be the trouble?
Patient: I'm feeling dizzy.
Doctor: And giddy?
Patient: Come again?
Doctor: Are you also feeling giddy?
Patient: I'm afraid I don't understand.
Doctor: You know, dizzy and giddy?
Patient: Must the two go together?
Doctor: Most certainly. One cannot have dizziness without giddiness; R42 dictates it so. It's like bread without butter, washing without drying, or gonorrhea without chlamydia.
Patient: I see.
Doctor: Besides, you know the old saying, "Not far behind dizziness one finds giddiness."
Patient: Such an odd saying. Is it even real? Who said it?
Doctor: Shakespeare. But alas, let me rephrase. Other than this dizziness of which you speak, are you also in a state of excitable frivolity?
Patient: I'd like a new doctor, please.
Additional Topics
- Burnout
- ICD-10