Skip to content
Nurtur Logo
  • courses &
    services
  • meet the team
  • free online
    courses
  • veterinary
    dialogue trainer
  • contact us
  • courses &
    services
  • meet the team
  • free online
    courses
  • veterinary
    dialogue trainer
  • contact us

Course Content

Expand All
Introduction
The Theory 1 Topic
Expand
Lesson Content
0% Complete 0/1 Steps
The Four As
Telephone Communication 6 Topics
Expand
Lesson Content
0% Complete 0/6 Steps
Conversation Phases
Establishing Urgency
Asking Open vs Closed Questions
Suggestive And “Scale” Questions
Test Your Skills With a VDT Simulation
Offering the Right Option
Text Communication 3 Topics
Expand
Lesson Content
0% Complete 0/3 Steps
Introduction
When Texting Is Useful
Tips For Texting
Summary
Hello,

Asking Open vs Closed Questions

Mastering Telephone and Text Communication Telephone Communication Asking Open vs Closed Questions

In order to assess whether a situation should be classified as extremely urgent, urgent, or non-urgent, asking the right questions is crucial. By asking two really good and relevant questions, you can assess the situation very quickly. Remember, you are doing a telephone triage and collecting a full medical history. As soon as you determine the urgency of the situation, you can offer an appointment appropriately. A barrage of questions is therefore not necessary; these can be discussed during the consultation. This way you keep your telephone conversation short and to the point.

An open question, by the way, can help you determine the urgency of the situation. If you ask an open question, you will receive much more information than if you ask a closed question. However, that does not mean that closed questions are necessarily bad. You can use closed questions to check whether the information you have given has been properly understood.

Activity: Test your knowledge with this quiz

Time limit: 0

Quiz Summary

0 of 1 Questions completed

Questions:

Information

You have already completed the quiz before. Hence you can not start it again.

Quiz is loading…

You must sign in or sign up to start the quiz.

You must first complete the following:

Results

Quiz complete. Results are being recorded.

Results

0 of 1 Questions answered correctly

Your time:

Time has elapsed

You have reached 0 of 0 point(s), (0)

Earned Point(s): 0 of 0, (0)
0 Essay(s) Pending (Possible Point(s): 0)

Categories

  1. Not categorized 0%
  1. 1
  1. Current
  2. Review
  3. Answered
  4. Correct
  5. Incorrect
  1. Question 1 of 1
    1. Question

    Quiz: Can you distinguish an open- from a closed question? Fill in the table below and find out!

    Sort elements
    • Open Questions
    • Closed Questions
    • Closed Questions
    • Open Questions
    • Closed Questions
    • Open Questions
    • Closed Questions
    • Closed Questions
    • Closed Questions
    • Open Questions
    • What did she eat this morning?
      • Has she had anything to drink today?
        • Can he put weight on his paw?
          • How long has he had diarrhea?
            • Has he had this before? Is the skin irritated?
              • When did you first notice it?
                • Has he had this before? Is the skin irritated?
                  • If I understand correctly, he vomited 2x this morning and didn't eat anything. Is that right?
                    • Which ear does he scratch the most?
                      • What did she eat this morning?
                        Correct
                        Incorrect

                      An open question often starts with “who,” “what,” “where,” “why,” or “how,” and can be used to collect information. A closed question is a question to which the answer is often “yes” or “no.” You can use this as a check question, for example to check certain conclusions.

                      You can also ask leading or rhetorical questions. We do not recommend using these types of questions, because you often already fill in the answer. Moreover, they can lead to a socially desirable response. For example, a leading question could be: “Is he still eating and drinking well?” or “Do you know that it is good to deworm your pet monthly?”.

                      Previous Topic
                      Back to Lesson
                      Next Topic
                      Stay in touch

                      hello@nurtur.co

                      +1 (610) 594 2340

                      10 Valley Stream Pkwy.,
                      Suite 301, Malvern, PA 19355

                      elevating veterinary team communication

                      2025 Nurtur Communications. All rights reserved.

                      Login
                      Accessing this course requires a login. Please enter your credentials below!

                      Accessing this course requires a login.

                      Please enter your credentials below!

                      Lost Your Password?
                      Register
                      Don't have an account? Register one!
                      Register an Account