Psychiatric history and mental state examination
Psychiatric History
Presenting problem(s)
Succinct statement, use patient’s own words
History of presenting problem
- Onset, duration, effects on life and relationships
- Events linked or coincident with onset
- Solutions tried, any reasons why they failed
- Mood and beliefs during last few weeks
Direct questions to elicit specific symptoms that support/refute particular diagnoses
- Anxiety
- Obsessions
- Depression (anhedonia, hopelessness, helplessness, guilt)
- Self-harm, harm others, suicidal thoughts, plans and ideas
- Psychosis
- Mania
- Eating disorders
- Drug and alcohol use
Past Psychiatric and Medical History
- Psychiatric outpatient treatment and/or admissions (voluntary or under section)
- Any previous deliberate self harm or suicidal attempts
- Relevant medical history
Drug History
- Prescribed
- Illicit drugs and dependency
- Alcohol and dependency
- Smoking
Family History
Construct genograms with occupations and any associated mental health problems
Personal and Social History
- Early childhood:
- Education
- Occupational History (and any reasons for changing)
- Psychosexual development
- Present social circumstances: housing, finance, work, relationships, stressors and any changes from baseline
Forensic History
Police arrest and/or convictions for criminal activity, particularly violence against people
Premorbid Personality
Prior to period of ill health, when patient reports being well elicit self-description of their personality, mood, social and cognitive functionality
Mental State Examination
Appearance & Behaviour
Physical appearance, general attitude, motor behaviour
Speech
Volume, construction (flight of ideas), enunciation
Mood and affect
- Mood is the sustained emotional state, however, affect is the instantaneous emotional state
- Congruity of mood and affect with speech content
- Stability
- Emotional reactivity
- Subjective (patient’s version)
- Objective assessment
- ELICIT deliberate self-harm OR harm to others or suicidal thoughts (ideation, intent and lethality of plan)
Thought
- Depressive rumination
- Over-valued ideas
- Ideas of reference, self-referential ideation, grandiose ideas
Delusions
- Thought withdrawal, thought insertion, thought broadcasting
- Obsessional thoughts, preoccupations, compulsive traits (e.g. checking things repeatedly)
- Subjective experience of thought disorder
- Objective signs of thought disorder
Perception
- Altered perception of real environmental object or stimuli
- False perception, in absence of external object or stimuli: hallucination.
- Auditory hallucinations: loud thoughts, thought echo, familiar or unfamiliar voices, 2nd or 3rd person, or voices giving commands
- Depersonalisation
Cognitive and intellectual function
- Level of consciousness (fully alert, fluctuates, clouded)
- Orientation in time, place and identity
- Attention and concentration: serial sevens, months in reverse
- Memory: immediate (recall digit span); recent (recall an address), remote (recall personal history)
- General Knowledge and intelligence
Formulation
- Main presenting symptom(s) and why patient has become ill at that particular point in time:
- Predisposing factors
- Precipitating factors
- Perpetuating factors
Insight
Subjective attitude towards illness and treatment
Differential diagnosis (most relevant equates to working diagnosis)