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Working with Your Health Care Professional
You
do not need to accept having asthma symptoms as being normal. If
you are having asthma symptoms, you and your doctor or asthma
counselor can work together to find ways to improve your health.
But how do you make sure that you are getting the best care?
Follow these tips to get the most out of your doctor or asthma
counselor visits.
Learn.
Find out
what triggers your asthma and
what you need to do to stay healthy. In fact, everyone in your
family needs to know what triggers your asthma and what they can
do if you need help. Learn all you can about the
medications you take. Know what to do
for
asthma attacks.
Want to
learn more about your own asthma? Click
here.
Click here
for a form designed to help you and your doctor talk about asthma.
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need to download
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What you
should expect from your asthma management program.
Think about
the goals you have for your breathing health. Below is a list of
what some of those goals could be:
-
Have an
Asthma Action/Management Plan
-
No
symptoms or minor symptoms of asthma, such as wheezing,
coughing, shortness of breath or chest tightness
-
Sleeping
through the night without asthma symptoms
-
No time
off from school or work due to asthma
-
Full
participation in physical activities
-
No
emergency room visits or stays in the hospital
-
Few or no
side effects from asthma medications
Ask
questions.
Make a list
of all of the goals that are not being met, and ask questions
about how you can improve.
Between
visits to your health care professional, write down all of your
questions so that you can bring up all of your concerns at the
next visit.
Give
information.
Tell your
doctor or asthma counselor what your symptoms have been since your
last visit. Be honest and as detailed as possible. Provide
peak flow meter readings, if you have
them. Talk about how and when you take your medicines. Talk about
problems or concerns you have about your medicines. Use the
checklist of treatment goals (above) to talk about how all of your
goals can be met.
State what
you expect at each visit.
Tell your
doctor or asthma counselor what you want from the visit. You may
simply want some questions answered, or maybe you might want to go
over your current medications to see if you need a change.
You may want to review and update your
Asthma Action/Management Plan. Try to be positive – this will help
both you and your health care professional
keep an open mind and improve how you relate to each other.
Follow
directions.
Make an
Asthma Action Plan with
your health care professional and demonstrate back what the doctor
wants you to do. This helps you to be sure that you know what you
are supposed to do. Don’t agree to do something that you do not
plan to do. Unless your doctor is told that a treatment plan is
hard for you, he or she will not know to make changes. If you are
confused, ask the doctor to say the information in another way.
Take your medicine as your doctor tells you.
Know when to
see your doctor or asthma counselor.
You should
see your doctor at least twice a year for your asthma, even if you
are feeling good. These visits will help both of you to keep
track of your asthma and make changes in your asthma
action/management plan as needed. Ask your doctor or asthma
counselor for guidelines about when you need to call or come in
between these regular visits. Here is a sample set of guidelines
the doctor may want you to follow.
You should follow your asthma action plan and
see the doctor as soon as possible
if:
-
Your
asthma symptoms
seem
worse than usual or happen more often
-
You are
taking your medicine more often to relieve the symptoms of
asthma
-
A
medicine does not seem to be working, or is making you feel
worse
You should
get help right away if:
-
Your
asthma keeps getting worse even after taking your medicine and
following your action plan
-
Your peak flow reading falls into the red zone
-
Your lips
or fingernails turn blue
-
Your
breathing is rapid and you can only talk in single words
Keep your
doctor’s visit.
Have a way
to remind yourself to keep your doctor’s visit. Put a note on the
refrigerator, your dresser, or some other place. If you cannot
keep your visit, call and change it. With time, you and your
doctor will find the treatment that works best for you. Remember
asthma symptoms can change over time. It’s important to see your
doctor or asthma counselor at least twice every year for your
asthma.
Adapted
from the National Institutes of Health pamphlet:
Your Asthma Can Be Controlled: Expect Nothing Less, NIH
Publication No. 92-2664
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