| Questions to Ask Before Surgery If
your surgery is not an emergency, you have time to ask your physician questions. The
following questions were formulated by the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research
(AHCPR), in partnership with the American Medical Association and the American Association
of Health Plans:
- Ask your surgeon to explain the surgical procedure.
- Ask your surgeon what the purpose is of the procedure. Some surgeries are performed to
relieve pain or reduce a symptom, others are performed to diagnose a problem.
- Are there alternatives to surgery? Sometimes other nonsurgical treatments, such as diet
change or certain exercises, may be an alternative to surgery.
- Ask your surgeon what you will gain by having the operation.
- Ask your surgeon about the possible complications and side effects of the operation.
- Ask your surgeon what you will gain -- or lose -- by not having the operation now.
- You can ask your surgeon how many surgeries he or she has performed and what
complications he or she has encountered with this procedure.
- Find out where your operation will be performed. (Some operations have higher success
rates depending upon the hospital's frequency of performing the procedure.)
- Ask what kind of anesthesia will be used for the procedure.
- Ask your surgeon how you might feel after surgery and what you will be able to do or not
do the first few days, weeks or months after surgery.
Click here to view the
Online Resources page of this Web. |