Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Practice Questions and MCQs
Practice Indian Medical PG questions for Transitions of Care. These multiple choice questions (MCQs) cover important concepts and help you prepare for your exams.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 1: Leaving (or forgetting) an instrument or sponge in the abdomen of the patient during a surgery and closing the operation is -
- A. Civil negligence (Correct Answer)
- B. Corporate negligence
- C. Contributory negligence
- D. Criminal negligence
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***Civil Negligence***
- Leaving a surgical instrument or sponge inside a patient's body is a classic example of **medical negligence** falling under **civil tort law** and constitutes a breach of duty of care.
- This is a **"never event"** or **sentinel event** that falls under the doctrine of **Res Ipsa Loquitur** ("the thing speaks for itself"), where negligence is self-evident.
- Such cases are typically handled through **civil medical malpractice suits** seeking compensation for damages, unless death occurs with gross negligence warranting criminal proceedings.
- The surgeon has failed to exercise the **standard of care** expected (proper sponge/instrument count), leading to patient harm and liability for damages.
*Contributory Negligence*
- **Contributory negligence** occurs when the patient's own actions contribute to their injury, reducing the defendant's liability.
- This does not apply here as the patient is **completely passive** during surgery under anesthesia and has no role in the surgical error.
*Corporate Negligence*
- **Corporate negligence** refers to the hospital or healthcare institution's failure to maintain proper systems, policies, staffing, or oversight.
- While the hospital may share **vicarious liability** for inadequate surgical protocols or counting systems, the primary responsibility lies with the **individual surgeon's negligence**.
*Criminal Negligence*
- **Criminal negligence** (under **Sec 304A IPC** - causing death by rash or negligent act) requires proof of **gross negligence** with reckless disregard causing death or grievous harm.
- While leaving an instrument is serious negligence, it is primarily a **civil matter** unless it results in death with proven gross recklessness, which would then attract criminal liability.
- The act alone, without fatal consequences and extreme recklessness, does not automatically constitute criminal negligence.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 2: In a village, despite health education for oral cancer, people don't follow instructions even after referral. Despite persuasive reminders, people are still reluctant. This best fits under which model:
- A. Health belief model
- B. Public health model
- C. Social compliance
- D. Trans-theoretical model (Correct Answer)
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***Trans-theoretical model***
- This model emphasizes that individuals move through distinct stages (precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance) when adopting a new behavior. The villagers' reluctance to follow instructions, despite education and reminders, suggests they are likely in the **precontemplation** or **contemplation** stages, where they are either unaware of the problem or are not yet ready to take action.
- The model accounts for the **difficulty in behavior change** even with external efforts, as readiness to change is internal and stages are progressive.
*Health belief model*
- This model focuses on an individual's perception of the **threat of a health problem** and the **pros and cons of taking action**. While education might address perceived susceptibility and severity, the model doesn't fully explain why people remain reluctant even after persuasive reminders, suggesting other factors beyond belief are at play.
- It primarily explains *why* individuals might *consider* changing their behavior but not necessarily *how* they progress through the actual change process.
*Public health model*
- The public health model is a broad framework used to understand and address health issues at a population level, often focusing on **prevention, promotion, and interventions**. While addressing oral cancer in a village fits within this model's scope, it doesn't specifically explain the *individual psychological barriers* to behavioral change, like reluctance despite education and reminders.
- This model is more about **strategies and policies** for population health rather than individual behavior change.
*Social compliance*
- Social compliance refers to individuals conforming to rules or requests from authority figures or social norms. The scenario explicitly states that despite "persuasive reminders," people are "reluctant," indicating a **lack of compliance** rather than an explanation for the behavior itself.
- This term describes the *outcome* of behavior in a social context, not the *underlying psychological process* of behavior change over time.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 3: Patients who need surgery within 24 hours are categorized under which color category in a disaster management triage?
- A. Green
- B. Yellow (Correct Answer)
- C. Blue
- D. Black
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***Yellow***
- Patients in the **yellow category** are those who require **significant medical attention** and intervention, such as surgery, but whose condition is stable enough to withstand a delay of a few hours up to 24 hours without immediate threat to life or limb.
- This category indicates a **delayed but urgent need** for treatment, distinguishing them from immediate (red) or minor (green) cases.
*Blue*
- The color **blue** is generally **not a standard triage category** in most commonly used disaster protocols (e.g., START, JumpSTART).
- Triage systems typically use red, yellow, green, and black to prioritize patients based on immediate medical need and prognosis.
*Green*
- The **green category** is for patients with **minor injuries** who are considered "walking wounded" and can often wait for treatment for several hours, sometimes up to a few days.
- These individuals are **stable** and do not require immediate intervention to preserve life or limb.
*Black*
- The **black category** is reserved for individuals who are **deceased** or have injuries so severe that survival is unlikely given the available resources, often implying **palliative care** rather than active life-saving interventions in a mass casualty event.
- This category signifies that resources would be better allocated to patients with a higher chance of survival.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 4: Which of the following is classified as a Type E adverse reaction?
- A. Toxicity
- B. Augmented effect
- C. Teratogenesis
- D. Rebound effect due to drug withdrawal (Correct Answer)
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***Rebound effect due to drug withdrawal***
- Type E adverse reactions are related to **end-of-treatment effects**, specifically withdrawal phenomena.
- The **rebound effect** after drug cessation, such as worsened angina after stopping beta-blockers, is a classic example of a Type E reaction.
*Toxicity*
- This is a general term for adverse effects from excessive drug doses and is **not a specific type** in the ABCDEF classification.
- Dose-dependent toxic effects typically align with **Type A** (augmented) reactions, which are predictable and related to the drug's pharmacology.
*Augmented effect*
- An **augmented effect** is classified as a Type A adverse drug reaction, meaning it is **dose-dependent**, predictable from the drug's known pharmacology, and common.
- Examples include bleeding with anticoagulants or hypotension with antihypertensives.
*Teratogenesis*
- **Teratogenesis** refers to drug-induced fetal malformations and is categorized as a **Type D** (delayed) adverse drug reaction.
- These effects are often severe, occur after prolonged exposure, and are rare.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 5: Most effective way of preventing hospital infection is:
- A. Fumigation
- B. Sterilization
- C. Hand washing (Correct Answer)
- D. Early diagnosis and treatment
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***Hand washing***
- **Hand hygiene** is the single most important and effective measure for **preventing nosocomial infections** and the transmission of multidrug-resistant organisms.
- It physically removes transient microorganisms and reduces the resident flora on hands, thereby **breaking the chain of infection**.
- Recommended by **WHO** and **CDC** as the cornerstone of infection prevention in healthcare settings.
*Fumigation*
- **Fumigation** is a process involving the use of gaseous disinfectants to kill pests or microbes, primarily for **terminal disinfection of rooms** or large spaces.
- While it can reduce microbial load on surfaces, it is **not used routinely** for preventing day-to-day transmission of pathogens from person to person.
- Not practical or effective for continuous infection control.
*Sterilization*
- **Sterilization** is a process that destroys all forms of microbial life, including spores, primarily applied to **medical instruments** and surgical equipment.
- While critical for preventing infection during invasive procedures, it is **not a direct method** for preventing general person-to-person transmission within a hospital environment.
- Cannot be applied to hands or routine patient care activities.
*Early diagnosis and treatment*
- **Early diagnosis and treatment** are crucial for managing existing infections in patients, which can help prevent their spread within the hospital.
- However, these measures primarily address **patient care** rather than directly interrupting the *transmission* of pathogens from healthcare workers to patients or between patients.
- This is a **secondary prevention** measure, not primary prevention of transmission.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 6: In triage, which category of patients is classified as green?
- A. Medium risk patients
- B. High-risk patients
- C. Dead patients
- D. Minor injury patients (Correct Answer)
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***Minor injury patients***
- Patients classified as **green** in triage are those with **minor injuries** that are not immediately life-threatening.
- They can often wait for treatment without significant risk of deterioration and may be able to **walk and self-care** to some extent.
*Medium risk patients*
- This category generally corresponds to **yellow** in triage, indicating patients with **significant injuries** who require care within a few hours.
- While not immediately life-threatening, their condition could worsen if treatment is delayed.
*High-risk patients*
- This category typically corresponds to **red** in triage, signifying patients with **life-threatening injuries** or conditions.
- These patients require immediate medical attention to survive.
*Dead patients*
- Patients who are deceased or have injuries incompatible with life are typically categorized as **black** in triage.
- This classification indicates that no medical intervention can save them.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 7: Most common mode of transmission of nosocomial infection is -
- A. Hand contact (Correct Answer)
- B. Droplet infection
- C. Blood and blood products
- D. Contaminated water
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***Hand contact***
- **Direct contact** with healthcare workers' contaminated hands is the primary way pathogens are transferred between patients in a healthcare setting.
- Failure to perform adequate **hand hygiene** between patient contacts is the single most important factor contributing to nosocomial infection transmission.
*Droplet infection*
- While droplet transmission can cause nosocomial infections, especially for respiratory viruses, it is not the most common mode of transmission for the overall burden of healthcare-associated infections.
- **Droplets** usually travel short distances and deposit on mucous membranes of the nose, mouth, or eyes of a susceptible host.
*Blood and blood products*
- Transmission through **blood and blood products** is a significant concern for specific infections (e.g., HIV, hepatitis B/C), but the incidence is relatively low due to stringent screening and safety protocols.
- This mode accounts for a small fraction of overall nosocomial infections compared to contact transmission.
*Contaminated water*
- **Contaminated water** can lead to outbreaks (e.g., *Legionella*, *Pseudomonas*), especially in immunocompromised patients, but it is not the most frequent mode of transmission on a day-to-day basis across all types of nosocomial infections.
- Healthcare facilities implement measures to ensure water safety, limiting this as the primary route.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 8: India is a country with different cultures and diverse languages. Which steps should a physician take to address the patient for better outcomes?
1. Insist on good communication
2. Insist on communication only via an interpreter
3. Treat them regardless of their cultural perceptions
4. The physician should consider the patient's religion and cultural perception
Select the correct combination:
- A. 1,4 (Correct Answer)
- B. 1,2
- C. 2,3
- D. 3,4
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***1,4***
- **Good communication** is paramount in healthcare, especially in a diverse country like India, to ensure **patient understanding**, **adherence** to treatment plans, and overall patient satisfaction.
- Considering a patient's **religion and cultural perceptions** allows the physician to tailor treatment and communication in a sensitive and **respectful manner**, fostering trust and better **health outcomes**.
*1,2*
- While good communication (1) is vital, **insisting solely on an interpreter** (2) may not always be feasible or necessary, particularly if the physician and patient share a common language or if the patient prefers direct communication. This can also disrupt the flow of rapport building.
- **Over-reliance on interpreters** can sometimes lead to misinterpretations or loss of non-verbal cues if the interpreter is not trained in medical interpretation.
*2,3*
- **Insisting only on an interpreter** (2) can be restrictive and may compromise direct patient-physician rapport, as discussed above.
- **Treating patients regardless of their cultural perceptions** (3) is an ethnocentric approach that can lead to mistrust, non-adherence, and ultimately **poor health outcomes** as it disregards the patient's beliefs and values regarding health and illness.
*3,4*
- **Treating patients regardless of their cultural perceptions** (3) can result in a lack of understanding and non-adherence if the treatment conflicts with the patient's deeply held beliefs.
- While considering religion and cultural perception (4) is crucial, this option includes an incorrect approach (3) that can undermine patient care.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 9: Death of a patient due to an unintentional act by a doctor, staff or hospital is
- A. Diminished liability
- B. Therapeutic privilege
- C. Vicarious liability
- D. Therapeutic misadventure (Correct Answer)
Transitions of Care Explanation: ***Therapeutic misadventure***
- This term refers to an **unintentional or unexpected complication or death** that occurs during appropriate medical treatment, despite the absence of negligence.
- It acknowledges that medical interventions carry inherent risks and that adverse outcomes can occur even when healthcare providers act reasonably and skillfully.
*Diminished liability*
- This concept typically arises in **criminal law**, referring to a partial defense that may reduce the degree of criminal responsibility due to mental impairment.
- It does not apply to situations involving unintentional harm or death during medical treatment in the absence of negligence.
*Therapeutic privilege*
- This is a legal doctrine allowing a physician to **withhold information** from a patient if disclosure would likely cause significant harm to the patient.
- It is unrelated to unintentional adverse outcomes or death in the context of medical treatment.
*Vicarious liability*
- This legal doctrine holds one party (e.g., a hospital or employer) responsible for the actions of another (e.g., a doctor or employee), especially when the latter is acting within the scope of their employment.
- While a hospital might be vicariously liable for a doctor's negligence, the term itself describes the *type* of liability, not the unintentional adverse event itself.
Transitions of Care Indian Medical PG Question 10: A 60-year-old male with a history of diabetes and hypertension is found unconscious. On examination, his pulse rate is 120/min and BP is 160/100 mm Hg. What is the next step in management?
- A. Order CT scan
- B. Check blood glucose (Correct Answer)
- C. Administer intravenous mannitol
- D. Immediately reduce BP with antihypertensives
Transitions of Care Explanation: **Explanation:**
In any patient presenting with an altered sensorium or unconsciousness, the immediate priority is to address the **"ABC" (Airway, Breathing, Circulation)** followed by identifying reversible metabolic causes.
**1. Why "Check blood glucose" is the correct answer:**
Hypoglycemia is a common, life-threatening, yet rapidly reversible cause of unconsciousness, especially in patients with a history of diabetes who may be on insulin or oral hypoglycemic agents. It is often referred to as a "medical chameleon" because it can mimic stroke or other neurological emergencies. Checking capillary blood glucose (CBG) is a bedside test that provides immediate results, allowing for life-saving intervention (IV Dextrose) before irreversible brain damage occurs.
**2. Why the other options are incorrect:**
* **Order CT scan:** While a CT scan is essential to rule out an intracranial hemorrhage or infarct, it should only be performed *after* metabolic causes like hypoglycemia have been excluded.
* **Administer intravenous mannitol:** Mannitol is used to reduce intracranial pressure (ICP). Administering it without a diagnosis of cerebral edema or mass effect is premature and potentially harmful.
* **Immediately reduce BP:** In the acute setting of a possible stroke or metabolic crisis, the elevated BP (160/100 mmHg) may be a compensatory response (Cushing’s reflex) or a result of sympathetic overactivity. Rapidly lowering BP can compromise cerebral perfusion pressure.
**High-Yield Clinical Pearls for NEET-PG:**
* **Whipple’s Triad:** Symptoms of hypoglycemia, low plasma glucose, and relief of symptoms after glucose administration.
* **Rule of Thumb:** In any "Coma" case, always think of **DON'T** (Dextrose, Oxygen, Naloxone, Thiamine) as part of the initial assessment.
* **Hypertension in Unconscious Patients:** Never treat blood pressure aggressively in the initial minutes unless it exceeds 220/120 mmHg or there is evidence of end-organ damage (e.g., aortic dissection).
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