Getting The Best Out Of Your Health Professional
To get the best out of your health professional it helps to:
- Know the medical resources and referral system
- Know your rights and responsibilities
Medical Resources
General Practitioners provide first consultation, physical examination, some investigations; – referral to specialists.
Family Planning Association – check your local telephone directory. Provides first consultation, physical examination, some investigations, referrals to specialists, on-going counselling.
Private Specialists (Gynaecologists, Endoncrinologists, Urologists) provide investigations and treatment for infertility. They require a referral from a G.P. or F.P.A. doctor.
Your Rights
- You have a right to be treated in a humane manner with care, consideration and dignity.
- You should be given a clear, concise explanation in non medical terms of your problem.
- You should be given a clear, concise explanation of any treatment or investigation including whether such treatment is of an experimental nature.
- You have the right to have your partner with you in the consulting room.
- You are entitled to refuse – an examination, a particular treatment or an operation.
- You have the right to ask for a second opinion. i.e. to see another doctor. Ask the specialist you are seeing or ask your general practitioner to refer you to another specialist.
- You have the right to see your medical file, but you cannot take it away. You can nominate a doctor (usually your general practitioner) to obtain all your medical records and to inform you of what they contain.
Your Responsibilities
- Be assertive. Ask, insist, tell, confront, book, change, refuse, persist, understand, question.
- Be well informed. Join a self help group, read literature.
- Join a private health fund. This enables choice of a specialist and treatment; allays costs in the long term.
- Keep your own record of all tests, results and treatments.
- Make a list of questions, before your appointment, and write down the answers. If you wish to tape the interview, ask for permission.
- Book a long appointment if you feel you need more time with the doctor.
- Inform the doctor or his receptionist if you are unable to attend a consultation.
- Take your partner with you to the doctor if you both wish to be involved. It can be mutually supportive.
- Defer any treatment if you are unsure about it.
- Have reasonable expectations about your health professional. Understand that s/he may be tired, rushed or unwell.
- If you cannot communicate with your doctor, it is in your interests to find someone with whom you can talk.
- If you are dissatisfied with your treatment, try to discuss this with the doctor.
- If you need to speak to the doctor, ring the surgery, leave your name, phone number and message, rather than interrupt him/her during consultations.
- If you have unexplained infertility and all investigations and treatments have been tried, you may like to return to your doctor every two years to check on new developments in infertility treatment that may help you.
Information in this article was provided by ACCESS, Australia’s National Infertility Network. You can visit their website www.access.org.au for more information.
Article Summary
To get the best out of your health professional, it helps to know the medical resources and referral system and to know your rights and responsibilities.
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