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Nancy Solomon
Phone: 314.977.8017
solomonn@slu.edu
February 1, 2005
ST. LOUIS -- If you’re gearing up for your first visit with a new doctor, prepare to bare more than your body, says Caroline Rudnick, M.D., Ph.D., a SLU
Care Des Peres family physician.
“Having a good relationship with your doctor is important. You should be comfortable discussing your lifestyle and health history so your doctor can best address your health concerns and keep you healthy,” says Dr. Rudnick, who recently joined the Primary Care and Prevention Center practice at SLUCare’s Des Peres Medical Arts Pavilion in west St. Louis County.
“Information is a powerful weapon, and if I’m armed, I can do a better job helping a patient fight to stay healthy.”
Here are the top five things that Dr. Rudnick suggests you and your doctor should discuss during your first visit:
- Your past medical history. “It sounds obvious, but it’s things some patients forget,” she says. Your doctor will ask what procedures you’ve had done, what illnesses you’ve had, whether you’ve been hospitalized and, if so, where and when. Write them down before you visit, and make sure the list is complete.
- Medications you take. “Bring the bottles with you to the appointment so that you don’t have to worry about whether you’ve spelled the name of medicine correctly or remembered to include the dosage.” If you are allergic to any medicine, now’s the time to mention it.
- Family history. Your doctor isn’t being nosy when she asks about the health problems of your siblings, parents, children, grandchildren and grandparents, and
at what age they developed. “Certain cancers, heart disease, high cholesterol, mental illness, diabetes and hypertension – they all run in families. These are the biggies that are genetic and that I need to know about.” Talk to your parents and grandparents so they can help you compile as complete and accurate a profile as possible. Have them fill out a family medical history information sheet, which you can share with your new doctor.
- Social history. Your lifestyle influences your health, so your doctor likely will ask who lives at your home, whether you have a pet (“having a dog is good for most people because it keeps you active”), what your diet is like, what your exercise routine is, how much sleep you get each night, whether you smoke or take drugs, and how often (if ever) you use alcohol. “As a family doctor, I tend to take care of Mom and Dad and the kids. The more I know about the family, the better I can do.”
- Your doctor’s experience and practice philosophy. Sharing information is a two-way street, so get some answers, too. Ask where your doctor went to medical school, how long she’s been practicing, what her special interests are and whether she has a particular approach to treating patients. “For instance, I’ll be on their case to get everything done that they should get done – scheduled vaccinations for children, annual mammograms and pap smears for women, prostate screenings for men, colon cancer screenings for those 50 and up, and cholesterol and diabetes screenings for those in their 30s and 40s,” she says. “I want my patients comfortable with asking me questions as well.”
Dr. Rudnick graduated from Washington University School of Medicine in 1995 and had been affiliated with a family practice group in Arnold before joining SLUCare Des Peres. She lives in Des Peres with her husband and two children.
For more information about the services offered by SLUCare, the physician practice of Saint Louis University School of Medicine, visit the World Wide Web at www.slucare.edu, or phone SLUCare Des Peres at 314.977.9600.
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