Some information can help assist your doctor to make a referral to a specialist. This includes:
Keeping a pain diary can help you track when you have pain, where it is located, how bad it is, and how certain activities increase or decrease the pain. It can also give your doctor valuable insight into any progress you have made when they begin your treatment plan.
- Impact of symptoms on daily activities:
Listing how your symptoms affect your quality of life is important for your doctor to understand how intrusive and impactful they are. Do your symptoms cause you to experience poor sleep? Have you felt changes in your mental health, such as anxiety, isolation, or depression? Do your symptoms prevent you from exercising or working? Do you cancel appointments or social events due to these symptoms? Do you feel that it affects your intimacy and relationships?
- Estimate on how much blood is lost during your period:
Heavy menstrual bleeding, can be an indicator of menstrual problems. Heavy bleeding can be changing pads or tampons every 1-2 hours, using more than 20 pads/tampons per cycle, passing clots larger than 2.5 cm, bleeding through clothing, or having periods that last more than seven days.
- What helps your symptoms?
If you regularly require medicine, supplements, or other treatments to assist with symptoms, list them out for your doctor, including how often you take them, and which are the most and least effective.