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Your First Visit

 Your first visit to a doctor who will treat your diabetes should have four parts:

  1. The doctor should take a medical history (ask questions about your life, complications, and previous diabetes treatment plan).
  2. The doctor should give you a complete physical examination.
  3. The doctor should run tests on your blood and urine to find out your blood glucose level, your glycated hemoglobin level (a measure of average blood glucose levels over the past two to three months), your cholesterol and fat levels, and your urine protein level. Your age, complications, and symptoms dictate which other laboratory tests your doctor does.
  4. Your health care team should work with you to make a plan for managing your diabetes.

This checklist will help you make sure your health care team is thorough at your first visit. They should:

Putting together a diabetes care plan is an important part of your first visit. Your diabetes care plan will not be the same as everyone else's. To work well, the plan must be adapted to your own life. For example, it needs to take into account your work or school schedule, how active you are, what and when you like to eat, your cultural background, and other medical problems you have.

You need to be involved in devising your diabetes care plan. Otherwise, it's unlikely that the plan will fit into your life or that you will understand what you need to do.

Is your diabetes care plan complete? If so, it should include:


Related links:

Introduction
Your Health Care Team
Other Specialists
Visiting Your Health Care Team
The First Visit
Future Visits
Visits for Children and Teens
Ask the Pharmacist


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