Medication Questions Prep
Health & Safety Boundary
This skill helps you prepare questions about your medications. It does not provide medical advice about starting, stopping, or changing medications. Never alter your medication regimen without direct guidance from your prescribing clinician.
When to Use / When Not to Use
Use this skill when you want to:
- Prepare structured questions before a medication review appointment.
- Organize your thoughts about side effects, interactions, or concerns.
- Clarify instructions for taking medications correctly.
- Understand what information to share with your clinician or pharmacist.
Do not use this skill to:
- Decide whether to start, stop, or change any medication.
- Self-diagnose conditions or self-prescribe treatments.
- Replace the advice of your prescribing clinician or pharmacist.
- Ignore urgent symptoms that may be related to medication (severe allergic reaction, difficulty breathing, swelling, rash).
Why Prepare Medication Questions
Medication discussions with clinicians are often brief. Having prepared questions helps you:
- Make the most of limited appointment time.
- Ensure you understand why each medication is prescribed.
- Address concerns about side effects or interactions.
- Confirm you are taking medications as intended.
Before Your Appointment: Information Gathering
Before you prepare questions, gather the following information:
Current Medication List
Include all prescription medications, over-the-counter drugs, supplements, and herbal products. For each, note:
- Name (generic and brand, if known)
- Dose
- How often you take it
- When you started taking it
- Who prescribed it
Side Effect Notes
- Have you noticed any new symptoms since starting a medication?
- Did any symptoms improve or worsen?
- When do symptoms occur relative to taking the medication?
Lifestyle Context
- Have there been changes in diet, alcohol use, or smoking?
- Are you pregnant, planning pregnancy, or breastfeeding?
- Have you started any new supplements or herbal remedies?
Question Frameworks by Topic
Purpose & Necessity
- What is this medication supposed to do?
- How long will I need to take it?
- What happens if I miss a dose?
- Are there non-medication alternatives I should also consider?
Side Effects
- What are the most common side effects?
- Which side effects should I report immediately?
- Are there side effects that usually improve over time?
- Could any of my current symptoms be related to this medication?
Interactions
- Can I take this with my other medications?
- Are there foods, drinks, or supplements I should avoid?
- Is it safe to drink alcohol while taking this?
Administration & Storage
- Should I take this with food or on an empty stomach?
- What time of day is best?
- How should I store this medication?
- What should I do if I miss a dose?
- What should I do if I accidentally take too much?
Monitoring & Follow-Up
- Do I need any blood tests or monitoring while on this medication?
- When should we review whether this medication is still needed?
- What signs would indicate this medication is working?
Pharmacist Questions
Pharmacists are excellent resources for medication questions. Consider asking:
- Can you review all my medications for interactions?
- Is there a less expensive generic alternative?
- Can you explain how to use this device (inhaler, injector, etc.)?
- What should I do if I experience a side effect?
Medication Review Checklist
Before every appointment, review:
Sample Prep Template
| Medication | Purpose | Concerns | Questions |
|---|
| Name, dose | Why prescribed | Side effects? Interactions? | Top questions to ask |
When to Seek Urgent Help
Seek immediate medical attention if you experience:
- Difficulty breathing or swallowing.
- Swelling of the face, lips, tongue, or throat.
- Severe rash or hives.
- Rapid heartbeat or chest pain.
- Severe dizziness or fainting.
Differentiation: There is no existing medication-specific skill. This skill focuses solely on question preparation and communication — no dosage advice, no drug interaction analysis, no medical recommendations.