Skip to content

Understanding your history leads to better health

To coincide with the launch of Google Health, I thought I would encourage you to take stock of your medical conditions, drugs and risks. This will improve you ability to have a good relationship with your doctor, and better outcomes for yourself.

How should I take stock?

This is the easiest thing in the world, but it will involve a little time. Take a paper and pencil, your favourite word-processor or one of the more technological solutions suggested below, and make three lists.

  1. List all your present and past medical conditions
  2. This includes anything you were treated for as a kid (you can leave out colds and flu’s unless they caused a hospital admission), anything you have been in hospital for, or taken long term medication for. Take a highlighter and mark those conditions that you think are still important to your health. For example, if you had a hip replacement 6 years ago, it may not cause you problems now, but you know that it might break down at some point in the future, so you still need to be aware of it.

  3. List all the medications you now take
  4. Try to work out for each medication when you are meant to take it, how many you should take and how strong the tablets/injections are. If you can, write out what the medication is for, and what other names it has. Finally, try to make a guess of how regularly you actually take the medication correctly. Remember, you are the only one that is reading this.

  5. List all the doctors and health professionals who look after you
  6. Make sure you have their contact details and write down which conditions each of them thinks they help you look after. Write down the next appointments you have with any of them. For each write down when you should make a new appointment. For example; “Make an earlier appointment with Charlie the Physio if I have worse back pain.”

Let these lists bounce around in your head for a little while to make sure they are complete and you haven’t forgotten anything. Now take a good look at your lists.

There are probably some conditions that you are not sure about, and don’t understand. Maybe there are medications you don’t know what they are for, or are forgetting to take. For those medications that you are worst at taking, make sure you know what they are meant to be treating. Check your final list to make sure all the doctors and clinics you see are listed, and you are not due for a new appointment with any of them.

What is Google Health?

Google Health is a new service offered by the omnipotent Google. Basically the idea is you enter all of your health information into one secure account. It keeps a track of all your conditions and medications, and all of the information that was previously on index cards (or in your head) is kept secure.

But there’s more. With your account, you can access interesting information about your conditions, search for US doctors and navigate to their websites, keep track of doctor contact information and even share the information you have entered with other people. This works in a secure way, and could be used to give your health information to a doctor, or your next of kin in case of an emergency.

This is not the only product in this market. HealthVault and Revolution Health offer similar products.

How does reviewing your health information help? What should I do now?

Once you have your health information in one place, save it and review it regularly. It is to your advantage to know what is going on with your health. If you have a printable or paper version, tuck it in the corner of your purse and keep it with you. This improves the care that you get - both in preventative medicine and any emergencies that occur.

I have seen this system in use and it works wonderfully. It wasn’t initiated by me, but my obstetrician when I was pregnant with my children. At the end of each office consultation, she would print out a summary of all the tests results, philosophical discussions and medications that were relevant. When I arrived for my deliveries in a state of panic and disarray, I handed the most recent print out to her, and she knew everything she needed to. It would have been the same if we ended up in a strange hospital or if her computer battery failed. It was the perfect solution to reduce my stress, and make her job easier.

Try your health audit today. Make sure there are no chinks in your knowledge and you will reap the health rewards.

Simple strategies to get the best from your doctor

Problems in healthcare occur when the patient or doctor (or both) don’t understand what is going on.

Being a patient is sometimes difficult, humbling and embarrassing. However, dealing with doctors can be easier, if you are a smart consumer. You can improve your healthcare, and get more out of your experience, by using smart strategies.

There is a lot of information available on the internet on “How to Be a Good Patient”. The articles seem eerily similar - health-care providers giving patient’s tips on how to behave in an appropriate manner. This advice seems, to me, more about the provider than the patient, “Behave like this and I will find you easier to deal with and therefore have more energy to sort out your problem.”

Healthcare doesn’t have to be oppositional. In fact, a doctor and patient should be acting as partners to reach a common goal. There are simple things that you can do to make sure you know what is going on and therefore be more in control. If you feel in control, you will be able to communicate more effectively with your doctor.

How Patient Hacker can help you

Patient Hacker is about making sure consumers understand what they need to do to achieve good healthcare. We will touch on strategies to help you:

  • Find doctors that you trust and who understand you
  • Find up to date information about your medical conditions, without trawling through potentially dodgy sites
  • Get clear information from your doctor about what they are thinking and planning
  • and

  • Understand the risks of health treatments, and why they are (often) worth taking

Please read through the blog and use the comments to participate in discussion. We would love to hear any strategies that have helped you develop a better partnership with your health carers.