M1-C5 Lesson 6 Acute vs Chronic Conditions & Risk Classification

Understanding Contraindications in Practice

A contraindication is any condition or factor that may:

  • Increase risk of adverse reaction

  • Compromise healing or outcomes

  • Require modification or avoidance of treatment

Not all contraindications are permanent — many are situational.


Acute Conditions Defined

Acute conditions are:

  • Sudden onset

  • Often temporary

  • Typically linked to infection, inflammation, injury, or reaction

Examples may include:

  • Active skin infections

  • Acute inflammation

  • Recent sunburn or irritation

  • Temporary allergic reactions

Acute conditions often require postponement, not permanent exclusion.


Chronic Conditions Defined

Chronic conditions are:

  • Long-term or recurring

  • Often managed rather than cured

  • Influenced by systemic health

Examples may include:

  • Autoimmune disorders

  • Chronic inflammatory skin conditions

  • Hormonal imbalances

  • Long-term medication use

Chronic conditions require careful assessment and modification, not assumption.


Risk Classification Levels

Contraindications can be classified by risk:

Low Risk

  • Minor, well-controlled conditions

  • Minimal impact on treatment

Moderate Risk

  • Conditions requiring modification

  • Increased monitoring needed

High Risk

  • Conditions requiring postponement or referral

  • Potential for serious adverse outcomes

Risk classification guides professional decision-making.


Why Risk Classification Matters

Proper classification:

  • Prevents overtreatment

  • Reduces adverse events

  • Supports ethical decision-making

  • Protects practitioner liability

Treating without classification increases risk for everyone involved.


Treatment Modification vs Treatment Refusal

Professionals must determine whether to:

  • Proceed with modification

  • Delay treatment

  • Refer to a medical professional

This decision must be:

  • Based on safety

  • Clearly explained to the client

  • Documented accurately


📘 Case Example: Misclassified Risk

Scenario:

A practitioner treats inflamed skin assuming the condition is minor.

Application:

Understanding acute vs chronic classification highlights why risk assessment must precede treatment.


💭 Think About This

Not every condition means “no treatment” — but every condition requires assessment.

Reflect:

  • Why is duration as important as severity?

  • How does risk classification protect the practitioner?


🧠 Scenario Questions 

Discussion Prompt:

Respond to one or more of the following:

  1. How do acute and chronic conditions differ in treatment planning?

  2. Why is risk classification essential before services?

  3. When should treatment be postponed rather than modified?


Hour Summary

Understanding acute vs chronic conditions and applying risk classification allows practitioners to make safe, ethical, and defensible treatment decisions when contraindications are present.