How to check for sickness

Monday, January 11, 2010

To find out the needs of a sick person, first you must ask important questions and
then examine him carefully. You should look for signs and symptoms that help you tell
how ill the person is and what kind of sickness he may have.
Always examine the person where there is good light, preferably in the sunlight—
never in a dark room.
There are certain basic things to ask and to look for in anyone who is sick. These
include things the sick person feels or reports (symptoms), as well as things you
notice on examining him (signs). These signs can be especially important in babies
and persons unable to talk. In this book the word ‘signs’ is used for both symptoms
and signs.
When you examine a sick person, write down your findings and keep them
for the health worker in case he is needed (see p. 44).
QUESTIONS
Start by asking the person about her
sickness. Be sure to ask the following:
What bothers you most right now?
What makes you feel better or
worse?
How and when did your
sickness begin?
Have you had this same
trouble before, or has
anyone else in your family or
neighborhood had it?
Continue with other questions in order to learn the details of the illness.
For example, if the sick person has a pain, ask her:
Where does it hurt? (Ask her to point to the exact place with one finger.)
Does it hurt all the time, or off and on?
What is the pain like? (sharp? dull? burning?)
Can you sleep with the pain?
If the sick person is a baby who still does not talk, look for signs of pain. Notice
his movements and how he cries. (For example, a child with an earache sometimes
rubs the side of his head or pulls at his ear.)GENERAL CONDITION OF HEALTH
Before touching the sick person, look at him carefully. Observe how ill or weak he
looks, the way he moves, how he breathes, and how clear his mind seems. Look for
signs of dehydration (see p. 151) and of shock (p. 77).
Notice whether the person looks well nourished or poorly nourished. Has he been
losing weight? When a person has lost weight slowly over a long period of time, he may
have a chronic illness (one that lasts a long time).
Also note the color of the skin and eyes. These sometimes change when a person
is sick. (Dark skin can hide color changes. So look at parts of the body where the skin
is pale, such as palms of the hands or soles of the feet, the fingernails, or the insides of
the lips and eyelids.)
• Paleness, especially of the lips and inside the eyelids, is a sign of anemia (p. 124).
Skin may also go lighter as a result of tuberculosis (p. 179), or kwashiorkor (p. 113).
• Darkening of the skin may be a sign of starvation (see p. 112).
• Bluish skin, especially blueness or darkness of the lips and fingernails, may mean
serious problems with breathing (p. 79, 167, and 313) or with the heart (p. 325).
Blue-gray color in an unconscious child may be a sign of cerebral malaria (p. 186).
• A gray-white coloring, with cool moist skin, often means a person is in shock (p. 77).
• Yellow color (jaundice) of the skin and eyes may result from disease in the liver
(hepatitis, p. 172, cirrhosis, p. 328, or amebic abscess, p. 145) or gallbladder
(p. 329). It may also occur in newborn babies (p. 274), and in children born with
sickle cell disease (p. 321).
Look also at the skin when a light is shining across it from one side. This can show
the earliest sign of measles rash on the face of a feverish child (p. 311).
TEMPERATURE
It is often wise to take a sick person’s temperature, even if he
does not seem to have a fever. If the person is very sick, take the
temperature at least 4 times each day and write it down.
If there is no thermometer, you can get an idea of the
temperature by putting the back of one hand on the
sick person’s forehead and the other on your own or
that of another healthy person. If the sick person has
a fever, you should feel the difference.
It is important to find out when and how the fever comes, how long it lasts, and how
it goes away. This may help you identify the disease. Not every fever is malaria, though
in some countries it is often treated as such. Remember other possible causes. For
example:
• Common cold, and other virus infections (p. 163). The fever is usually mild.
• Typhoid causes a fever that goes on rising for 5 days. Malaria medicine does not help.
• Tuberculosis sometimes causes a mild fever in the afternoon. At night the person
often sweats, and the fever goes down.

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