354,024 views
37 votes
37 votes
A patient visits her doctor for an annual checkup. She is very nervous about the visit, although she does not have any specific symptoms or complaints. The patient has a pile of papers printed from all corners of the Internet, each containing information on an illness she fears she has. The doctor listens to the patient’s complaints and, after a full workup, declares that she is perfectly healthy. But the doctor does provide the patient with one piece of information: a short list of reputable websites to visit in the future for any health concerns and a checklist for judging the reliability of any other site.

take-home patient information
patient information specially designed for children
patient information specially designed for aging patients
listening skills

User Naveed Rafi
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2.8k points

2 Answers

19 votes
19 votes
The patient should limit her search of information to specific conditions currently affecting her. Sometimes we can overdo our use of the internet, and it can become a distraction rather then being helpful
User Hsandt
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2.8k points
13 votes
13 votes

Answer:

1 and 4

Step-by-step explanation:

got it right on edge <3

User Yancyn
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3.4k points