Home
STARTER GUIDES Where to Begin
Helpful Tips
DISEASE BASICS Prostate Cancer 101
Questions & Answers
DECISION TIME Treatment Options
AFTER TREATMENT Your Sex Life
Incontinence
Nutrition
If Cancer Returns
LIVING & COPING Managing Stress
Communication
Stories of Hope
RESOURCES Support Groups
Books
News You Can Use
Upcoming Events
SITE INFO What's New!
About This Site
Contact Us
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Site Map
Blog Archive
 

Tips to help keep prostate cancer information organized

The first few weeks after your loved one’s diagnosis, you will probably be busy gathering information about prostate cancer and visiting doctors.

If you are a person who likes to organize things, you can develop a system for keeping track of important dates, medical articles, and other educational materials. Here are some tips that may help you:

  • Buy an expanding file or legal sized folder you can carry with you. Use it to hold all of your loved one’s medical records, prescriptions, bills, insurance papers, business cards, important articles, and other educational materials.
  • Buy a notebook and reserve the first few pages for important phone numbers and addresses. This makes it easy to find those numbers when you need them quickly. Use the notebook as you do your research, and take notes when you and your loved one visit various doctors.
  • Get a small appointment book or calendar (one that fits in your big folder). Use it to keep track of all your loved one’s upcoming appointments.
  • Keep track of every conversation you have with your health insurance company in your notebook. Remember to date the conversation and ask for the name of the person you speak with. By doing this, you will be able to document your conversation, and what was discussed, should a problem arise.
  • Ask for copies of every test result and keep them in your folder. You will be surprised how many times one doctor will forget to fax test results to another doctor. Doing this will save you precious time, and each doctor can address important issues at every visit because they will have the information they need.
  • Also jot down the names of any nurses you meet. Nurses may be easier to get a hold of than doctors. If you have a quick question, the nurse may be able to answer it if the doctor isn’t around.
  • Record the number of miles you drive to every hospital or medical visit. You should be able to deduct this as an expense on your yearly tax return. If you need to stay overnight, you may also be able to deduct the cost of your hotel. Check with your accountant or the IRS.
9/08

Always discuss everything you read on this web site with a qualified medical professional.



Managing your emotions
Understanding your man's emotions
Why it's important to learn all you can
Searching for information
Pros and cons of telling others
Support for you and him
Family matters and concerns
Finding faith when you just can't
Return from get and stay organized to homepage

Search Our Site
Custom Search

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape


footer for Information page