# 4079
As a former paramedic, I am keenly aware of how important it is for everyone to know their personal, and family, medical history.
Every Thanksgiving since 2004 the Surgeon General has declared Thanksgiving as National Family History Day. Over the holiday weekend - while you are visiting with family - it is an ideal time to ask about and share family medical history.
The CDC and the HHS have a couple of web pages devoted to collecting your family history, including a web-based tool to help you collect, display, and print out your family’s health history.
Family History: Collect Information for Your Child's Health
And finally, a repost of one of my earlier blogs on a similar topic . . .
Those Who Forget Their History . . .
. . . . are condemned to wait longer in triage.
Not where you thought I was going, is it?
But this is an important aspect of personal preparedness.
Knowing, and having immediately available, a medical history on every member of your family.
As a former paramedic - one who has struggled to take thousands of medical histories in the back of a moving vehicle, or at the scene of a medical emergency - I know how difficult getting an accurate and complete medical history can be.
As you might imagine, when someone is unconscious, or unable to respond to questions, getting a medical history becomes more problematic.
You have to rely on relatives, friends, neighbors . . .and sometimes even snooping in their medicine cabinet.
Often, people don’t even know what medicines they are taking, or why.
If I had a nickel for every time a patient denied taking meds, but under the pressure of additional questioning, admitted to taking `a red one, a blue one and two white ones in the morning . . and 3 white ones at night’ - well, I’d have a lot of nickels.
Since I act as a medical advocate for several relatives, I maintain a pretty elaborate medical history on each of them. When one of them falls ill, a copy goes with them to the doctor or the emergency room.
I never see my doctor without bringing him an update history. Sure, he knows me. But he sees hundreds of patients, and me only every few months. There is no way he can remember the details of my medical history.
So I provide him with a short, 1 page synopsis that he can scan in about 30 seconds, to make his life, and mine, easier.
Since you can’t always know, in advance, when you might need medical care it is important to carry with you some kind of medical history at all times. It can tell doctors important information about your history, medications, and allergies when you can’t.
Many hospitals and pharmacies provide – either free, or for a very nominal sum – folding wallet medical history forms with a plastic sleeve to protect them.
I’ve scanned the one offered by one of our local hospitals below. It is rudimentary, but covers the basics.
In a medical emergency, minutes can make the difference between life and death. And even in less urgent cases, having all of this information can go a long ways towards speeding your treatment.
You should make it a point, this week, to get medical history forms for every member of your family – regardless of their age – and fill them out.
Except for small children, everyone should find a way to carry it with them at all times.
This is not a one-time, make it and forget, prep. You need to update it every time you add or change your medications, or your medical history changes. It only takes a few minutes now.
But it could save a lot of time later.
Related Post:
- HHS: Call For Public Comment On H5N1 Research
- CDC Statement On OIG Report On Vaccine Program For Children
- IOM Report On Vaccine Safety Concerns
- HHS Facebook Programming Challenge
- HHS Proposal To Improve Human Medical Research
- CDC Grand Rounds Webcast: Electronic Health Records
- Video: H5N1 – The Next Pandemic?
- Promising Practices & Pandemic Toolkits
- HHS Webcast Today: Pregnant Women And Flu
- Influenza Social Media Toolkits
- 2010 Flu Season: A Look Ahead
- Two From CIDRAP
- HHS Unveils Emergency Medical Countermeasures Report
- The Amazing Growth Of New Media
- PHE.GOV: Public Health Preparedness Has A New Home
- Pandemic And Preparedness Video Roundup
- AHRQ Report: Little Progress Seen On HAIs
- HHS `New Media’ Interview Today
- HHS Video: We Heard The Bells
- An Open Letter To The American People On The Flu Vaccine
- National Influenza Vaccination Week
- IOM: Priorities For The National Vaccine Plan
- HHS To Review Vaccine & Public Health Response Policies
- HHS Webcast Monday
- Do1Thing: A 12 Step Preparedness Program
- CDC FluView Week 52
- CDC Statement On This Year’s Flu Activity
- CDC HAN Update On Fungal Meningitis Outbreak
- Referral: McKenna On The Steroid-Linked Meningitis Outbreak
- NIVW 2012
- Early Flu Cases Begin To Emerge
- MMWR: Yosemite Hantavirus
- CDC Update Of Fungal Meningitis Cases
- A Health Crisis In Slow Motion
- UK: Norovirus Season Starts Early
- MMWR: Carbon Monoxide Exposures Related To Hurricane Sandy
- Peru: Alert For Bubonic Plague In Ascope Region
- CDC HAN Advisory: Additional NECC Products Found Contaminated
- CDC: Laboratory Test Results From Meningitis Outbreak
- FDA Statement On Conditions Reported At NECC Facility
- CDC Fungal Meningitis Update – Oct. 26th
- Preparing For After The Storm Passes
- The UK’s Whooping Cough Outbreak
- CDC HAN Advisory & Updates On Fungal Meningitis
- CDC Fungal Meningitis Update – Oct 22nd
- CDC Fungal Meningitis Update – Oct 19th
- CDC Fungal Meningitis Update – Oct 18th
- Detailed Report On Fatal Meningitis Case
- CDC Fungal Meningitis Update – Oct 17th
- Safe Rooms: Improving Your Odds
- Do1Thing: A 12 Step Preparedness Program
- Resolve To Be Ready: 2013
- Ready or Not? TFAH Report 2012
- Public Health Practices (PHP) Update
- Black Swan Events
- The Gift of Preparedness 2012
- National Family History Day
- Paper: Are We Prepared For A Pandemic In Low Resource Communities?
- MMWR: Carbon Monoxide Exposures Related To Hurricane Sandy
- Canada: Another West Coast Temblor
- USGS: Eastern Earthquakes - Rare But Powerful
- Unreasonable Expectations
- Shaken, And Hopefully Stirred
- Sandy Strengthens Overnight
- Preparing For After The Storm Passes
- Sandy: Northeast Increasingly Under The Gun
- Reminder: ShakeOut Drills On Oct. 18th
- Dozens Of Ways To Spell `I-L-I’
- NPM12: Because We Don’t Know What Tomorrow Will Bring
- NPM12: One For The Home, And One More For The Road
- NPM12: Those Who Forget Their History . . .
- NPM12: The Ethics Of Preparedness
- NPM12: Disaster Buddies
- IDSA: Pandemic and Seasonal Influenza Preparedness
Widget by [ Iptek-4u ]