More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
How a Patient Can Help a Doctor Give the Best Care
By JANE E. BRODY, New York Times
September 30, 2008

As primary care doctors become increasingly pressed for time, here are 10 tips to help maximize the benefits you get from modern medical care.

  1. Write down your questions before calling or seeing the doctor. Don?t wait until the end of a visit to mention a pressing health concern.
  2. Keep a diary of your symptoms and the circumstances under which they occur, and bring it with you to the appointment.
  3. Maintain an up-to-date list of all the medications and over-the-counter drugs and supplements you take and their dosages. Bring that with you.
  4. Write down what the doctor says about your condition and how to treat it.
  5. Know your personal and family medical history, including illnesses and operations you had and diseases or causes of death of your parents, grandparents and siblings.
  6. Be honest about your lifestyle. If you smoke, drink alcohol or take recreational drugs, reveal how often or how much.
  7. Be willing to see a physician?s assistant or nurse practitioner for routine care like wellness checkups and immunizations.
  8. Ask if the doctor uses e-mail and checks it daily. If so, use e-mail messages to discuss nonurgent matters or lingering concerns, to clarify treatment instructions and to report an improvement in symptoms. But call immediately if your symptoms fail to improve as expected or suddenly get worse.
  9. If you call about a worrisome symptom and the doctor tells you to go to the emergency room, don?t wait. If you are told to go by ambulance, do it; you?ll be seen right away, which could make a life-or-death difference.
  10. Get an independent second opinion if you are told that you have a life-threatening condition or that surgery is needed to correct a problem, or if you are doubtful about the quality of tests that were done.
 

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Write down what the doctor says about your condition and how to treat it
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I would expand this with:

Write down the detailed instructions on how to take any medications being prescribed. Ask if there are any foods or drinks or over the counter medications to be avoided with this prescription.

Maintain an up-to-date list of all the medications and over-the-counter drugs and supplements you take and their dosages. Bring that with you.

Show this list to the doctor when a new prescription is issued to ensure there are no drug interactions with what is already being used.
 
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