GeneralPatient guide

How to ask your doctor a useful question

Ten minutes in a consultation goes fast. A little preparation helps you get more out of it — and helps your doctor too.

By Dr. Enani April 27, 2026 Reviewed April 27, 2026 by Dr. Enani 1 min read

Before you go

Write down your top three concerns in order of importance. If you can only get to one, it should be the most important one. List medications you're taking, including over-the-counter ones and supplements. Bring a printout if you have one — phones get unlocked, screens lock.

Frame the symptom

A useful description has three parts: what it feels like, when it started, and what makes it better or worse. "Sharp pain in the right upper abdomen, started Tuesday after a fatty meal, worse when I lie on my back" tells your doctor more than "stomach pain for a few days."

Three questions worth asking, almost always

  • "What is the most likely explanation, and what else could it be?"
  • "What would make this worse, and what should make me come back sooner?"
  • "What's the plan if this doesn't get better in [a specific amount of time]?"

At the end of the appointment

Repeat the plan back in your own words. Doctors sometimes use language we don't realize is unclear; saying it back catches misunderstandings while there's still time to fix them. Ask for written instructions if anything is complex.

Between visits

Keep brief notes — symptoms, what you took, how you slept, what you ate. The pattern is usually more useful than any single observation. If something changes meaningfully, don't wait for the next scheduled appointment to mention it.

A word about searching online

Reading about your condition is fair and often helpful. Reading from many sources, comparing what they say, and bringing your questions in is fine. Just remember: a search engine doesn't know you. It can suggest possibilities; it can't weight them.

Bottom line

Doctors see a lot in a short window. The more you can hand them in the first two minutes, the more time there is for what you actually need: their judgment.

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