Is Smoking Part of Medical History?

I often ask as I like to paint the most complete picture of the person possible. There are many conditions that may not be relevant to the particular call, but we document them anyways.....think stents, hyperlipidemia, or GERD for a trip and fall patient.
 
Ahah what ??? are you serious?? In fact, it is more dangerous to smoke cigarettes than using drugs and I'm not joking. I just can’t understand why many people think that smoking is safe and continue to smoke despite the huge amount of evidence that it really kills. Recently I found out that my son smokes and I was very disappointed ... It was a real blow for me because I tried to make him a real man without bad habits ... I decided to talk to him and he regretted his habit, but he couldn’t nothing to do with it because nicotine is very addictive. I decided to try to help him and bought a vape for him and he started smoking a vape instead of cigarettes. It really helps and it’s also safe, so I don’t recommend smoking cigarettes.
 
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Ahah what ??? are you serious?? In fact, it is more dangerous to smoke cigarettes than using drugs and I'm not joking. I just can’t understand why many people think that smoking is safe and continue to smoke despite the huge amount of evidence that it really kills. Recently I found out that my son smokes and I was very disappointed ... It was a real blow for me because I tried to make him a real man without bad habits ... I decided to talk to him and he regretted his habit, but he couldn’t nothing to do with it because nicotine is very addictive. I decided to try to help him and bought a vape for him and he started smoking a vape instead of cigarettes. It really helps and it’s also safe, so I don’t recommend smoking cigarettes.
Vaping is not safe. It may be less of a danger than cigarettes, but it has it's own host of medical problems.
 
Ahah what ??? are you serious?? In fact, it is more dangerous to smoke cigarettes than using drugs and I'm not joking. I just can’t understand why many people think that smoking is safe and continue to smoke despite the huge amount of evidence that it really kills. Recently I found out that my son smokes and I was very disappointed ... It was a real blow for me because I tried to make him a real man without bad habits ... I decided to talk to him and he regretted his habit, but he couldn’t nothing to do with it because nicotine is very addictive. I decided to try to help him and bought a vape for him and he started smoking a vape instead of cigarettes. It really helps and it’s also safe, so I don’t recommend smoking cigarettes.
I suggest you also brush up on the vaping evidence.
 
I wouldnt ask about obesity, but in the patients PMH section i would put "obese" when relevant. Like you said, social history is history. Its one of the many things my staff doesnt note that annoys me.

Weight, Height and Calculated BMI are observations. Obesity is a medical diagnosis.
 
If they just have a broken leg, then smoking is irrelevant.

If they fell and broke their leg because they suddenly felt short of breath and got dizzy...then, yes, smoking is a relevant question.

Smoking is not a social question. It is a question about chemicals in the body and conditions resulting from damage to the body. I don't ask every patient to detail what vitamins they take, but I do ask some, because sometimes it's relevant. The catch is that we don't always know when it is or isn't relevant until we often already have the information.

I was WAAAYYY wrong when I posted this several years ago.

Smoking is social history.
 
I was WAAAYYY wrong when I posted this several years ago.

Smoking is social history.

I think you were correct back then, but technically correct now. It depends on the context. Yes, when charting, smoking goes in the social tab. But it is often relevant enough that it should be thrown in along with other PMH in your handoff: "55m w/PMH TD2M, HTN, 50 pk/yr current smoker, presenting with chest pain x2 hours."
 
I think you were correct back then, but technically correct now. It depends on the context. Yes, when charting, smoking goes in the social tab. But it is often relevant enough that it should be thrown in along with other PMH in your handoff: "55m w/PMH TD2M, HTN, 50 pk/yr current smoker, presenting with chest pain x2 hours."

Agreed...smoking is as least as important to pay attention to as diabetes is. Vascular surgeons wouldn't have jobs if it weren't for cigarettes....
 
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