Kevin Mcgee Testicular Pain – iHuman Case Study Solution

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Kevin Mcgee Ihuman Testicular Pain | Testicular Pain — Acute Scrotal Assessment

The kevin mcgee ihuman testicular pain is one of the most challenging single-attempt graded assignments in your NP program. Kevin McGee presents with testicular pain — an acute scrotal case requiring rapid clinical reasoning to exclude testicular torsion before evaluating epididymitis, orchitis, varicocele, and inguinal hernia. You only get ONE attempt — this complete solution covers every scored section so you walk in fully prepared.

One submission. Auto-scored history within the 120-interaction cap, auto-scored physical exam with harmful exam penalties, manually graded EHR in two separate sections, and a standalone 10-point reflection document submitted separately. Every section must be right the first time.

About the Kevin Mcgee Ihuman Testicular Pain

Kevin McGee presents with testicular pain — an acute scrotal case requiring rapid clinical reasoning to exclude testicular torsion before evaluating epididymitis, orchitis, varicocele, and inguinal hernia. Although Kevin McGee and Caleb Metz share the same chief complaint, each iHuman case uses a different patient presentation with different physical exam findings and potentially different primary diagnoses.

Why Students Lose Points on the Kevin Mcgee Ihuman Testicular Pain

  • History (20 pts): The onset timing — exactly when and how suddenly the pain began — is the pivotal question that determines triage urgency. Sudden onset during sleep or physical activity strongly suggests torsion; gradual onset over days suggests epididymitis. The voiding symptom history — dysuria, urethral discharge — is in HPI Other Complaints I–Z and is the pivotal question for epididymitis as the primary diagnosis.
  • Physical Exam (20 pts): The Prehn’s sign (pain relief with scrotal elevation suggests epididymitis; no relief or worsening suggests torsion) and the cremasteric reflex test are required individually under the Male Genitalia category. Performing anal or prostate exams without clinical justification for acute scrotal pain in this patient may constitute harmful exam selections.
  • EHR Documentation (20 pts): Documenting ‘within normal limits’ instead of actual findings and writing ‘CN II–XII intact’ without specifying how each was tested both fail the ‘accurate and detailed’ rubric criterion.
  • Management Plan (15 pts): Diagnostic test rationale must explain why each test was ordered for this specific patient — not just list the test name. Each test, drug, and education point requires its own separate in-text APA citation.
  • Reflection (10 pts, most forgotten section): Worth a full 10% of the assignment grade, this standalone Word document is submitted separately from iHuman. Students who upload only the Performance Overview Report receive zero on the reflection.

Kevin Mcgee Ihuman Testicular Pain — Complete Solution Contents

  • 🩺 Complete History Guide (All Category Branches + OLDCARTS + Full ROS): Right questions across all eleven iHuman history categories — including Social History, Family History, and ROS branches most students skip. OLDCARTS and complete ROS in clinical language.
  • 📋 Physical Exam Guide — Exact iHuman Search Terms, Harmful Exams Flagged: Every credited exam listed by its exact multi-word iHuman search bar term. Harmful exams identified and excluded. Simulated video/audio interactions (JVP, orthostatic vitals, Weber/Rinne, lung auscultation) explained step by step.
  • 📄 EHR Subjective Write-Up (HPI + Full ROS, OLDCARTS): Complete subjective documentation — no objective data mixed in, all ROS systems with pertinent negatives, professional terminology.
  • 📄 EHR Objective Write-Up (Physical Findings Only): Objective findings documented accurately using ‘Not assessed’ for unexamined systems, formatted for direct platform entry.
  • 🔍 Key Findings — Ranked for Scoring: Every significant finding from most to least clinically important.
  • 📝 Problem Statement (Correct Format, All Components): Complete 2–3 sentence summary with all rubric-required components.
  • 🔬 Primary Diagnosis and Ranked Differentials: Correct diagnosis confirmed with rationale, all differentials ranked and justified.
  • 💊 Management Plan — All 6 Components: Diagnostic workup with APA citations, complete prescriptions including OTC with dispense quantity and refills, consults, education with evidence base, follow-up with red flags.
  • ✏️ Reflection (Standalone Word Document Included): Prewritten 150–300 word response to the uninsured patient scenario — APA cited, ready for separate upload.
  • 📚 APA 7th Edition References: All sources formatted correctly per NP program scholarly source requirements.

FAQs: Kevin Mcgee Ihuman Testicular Pain

Does this cover both EHR sections separately?

Yes. The EHR subjective section and the EHR objective section are written separately — OLDCARTS-structured, professional terminology, ‘Not assessed’ correctly used for unexamined systems.

Will the physical exam guide tell me what to type in the iHuman search bar?

Yes — the exact multi-word search term for every required exam is listed so you can locate it immediately in the dropdown.

Is the reflection included?

Yes — prewritten 150–300 word Word document, APA cited, formatted for the separate course dropbox submission.

What is the correct diagnosis for this case?

The confirmed primary diagnosis and full DDx rationale are included in the downloaded PDF solution.

How is the solution delivered?

Instantly via automated download link the moment your Stripe or PayPal payment confirms.

Looking for more iHuman solutions? Browse our complete iHuman case study solutions library or explore a related case: Caleb Metz Testicular Pain iHuman case study.

This case is assigned through the iHuman by Kaplan platform, used in NP programs at Walden University and Chamberlain University and other graduate nursing programs nationwide.

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