Login

Your Position: Home > Hospital Beds > 10 Questions You Should to Know about Hospital consulting room

10 Questions You Should to Know about Hospital consulting room

Author: Evelyn w

Aug. 04, 2025

10 Questions You Should Consider for Specialist Consultations

Caring for patients in the inpatient setting is complex and often requires consultation from specialists. Yet the actual skill of obtaining a consult is rarely taught. Medical students and residents usually learn by trial and error, becoming targets of frustrated consultants and suffering humiliation and much anxiety. To facilitate communication between the primary team and the specialist, we propose that the student and/or resident start by asking the following questions.

With competitive price and timely delivery, KAIRUIJIEDE sincerely hope to be your supplier and partner.

1. Why Call This Consult?

To decide whether you need a consult, first determine the type. Consultations can be broken down into three different types: advice on diagnosis, advice on management, or arrangements for a specific procedure or test. Advice on diagnosis or management is typically required when a clinical issue has reached the bounds of knowledge, experience, or comfort zone of the team or physician (e.g., idiopathic leukocytosis). For procedures, a consultant who is licensed to perform the procedure may be required (e.g., endoscopy for GI bleed).

2. What Should Be Done before a Consult Is Requested?

First, ask yourself, “If I were the consultant, what would I want to know?” Before calling, put yourself in the shoes of the consultant and consider the available data carefully to develop your own hypotheses. For example, infectious disease consultants typically make judgments based on relevant culture data, current and/or past antibiotics, imaging, and signs or symptoms of active infection. Reading about the problem beforehand allows you to anticipate possible questions and consider additional studies that may be requested by the consultant. It also helps ascertain whether the consultation is actually necessary or targeted to the right team.

3. What Is the Clinical Question?

Bergus and colleagues found that a well-structured clinical question clearly identifies the treatment the primary doctor is proposing and the desired outcomes for the patient.1 For instance, rather than asking, “What should we do for this 75-year-old man with chest pain?”, a better question might be, “Will the addition of ranolazine increase exercise tolerance in our 75-year-old man with angina who is already taking a beta blocker and nitrates?” When both components are present, clinical questions are more likely to be answered.

4. How Do I Best Present the Case to My Consultant?

Requesting a consultation requires a succinct presentation that focuses on the aspects of the case most pertinent to the specialist. To do this, again put yourself in the shoes of the consultant. For example, a patient’s history of venous thromboembolism (VTE) will always be relevant to a hematologist, whereas a history of GERD may not be needed in your initial conversation. Limit the initial presentation to two to three minutes and organize using the four I’s:

  1. Introduction: “My name is X with blue medicine team; I am calling to request a consult.”
  2. Information: Patient name, location, medical record number, attending physician.
  3. Inquiry: “I am requesting evaluation for an EGD in a patient with an upper GI bleed.”
  4. Important items (the story): “Mr. X is a 55-year-old male with history of peptic ulcer disease presenting with abdominal pain.”

5. What Data Requests Should I Anticipate?

Have your clinical data easily accessible in case additional information is requested (i.e., keep the chart open when calling). If certain tests are predictably going to be needed by the specialist (e.g., renal ultrasound for a nephrologist), make sure that the results are available or in process. Also, be prepared to take notes if the consultant requests additional tests up front.

6. How Urgent Is the Consult?

Consultations can be emergent, urgent, or elective. Directly communicate any emergent or urgent consults in order to clarify the issues expeditiously. For more routine consults, consider delaying the call until enough laboratory data or imaging is available for the consultant to answer the question. Do not call a nonurgent consult at the end of the day or on a weekend.

Questions you might ask the consultant - CupFoundJo

"The immense relief that I have obtained so far from just reading everyone’s stories on this site is incredible. Up to this point I have felt so very alone as no one could give me any advice, nothing to read, nothing to comfort me as I flounder.."

"Not only is the website an essential resource but the Foundation has been instrumental in bringing together experts from across the world and encouraging the development of research to improve the outcomes of patients with CUP."

"At first I was tired of answering the questions about CUP to friends and some doctors but this website has helped me realize that the world needs to know about us."

For more Hospital consulting roominformation, please contact us. We will provide professional answers.

"Thanks for your help. My family, son is also a doctor, have found it an invaluable resource from day one [of my husband’s CUP diagnosis]."

"The information here is the most comprehensive and timely data regarding CUP in the world. In my view this is an invaluable resource."

"This site provides much needed and accessible help for CUP patients and their loved ones - I'm very, very impressed."

“...a good balance of accessible information, but not too much to overwhelm the patient/carer.... I’m very impressed and will continue to direct my patients, relatives and colleagues to it."

"We as a family needed you at the worst time in our lives and found the support for the short time we needed it so helpful."

"Your site is so great. I have a hard road ahead but feel calmer now that I've started a targeted chemo treatment. I fully understand the importance of your website and help."

"I also want to thank you personally for setting up the website and this forum, I feel empowered."

"Many thanks for helping me navigate the cupfoundjo web site. It has much more information than I expected to find and is a very useful resource for cup patients and their families."

"As an oncologist treating numerous patients with CUP I greatly value the work of Jo's friends. I am also very impressed by the Jo's friends website which is a very useful resource for patients, carers and health professionals."

Contact us to discuss your requirements of Hospital emergency trolley. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.

98 0

Comments

Join Us