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Cancer Explained
Beginner 6 min read Verified

Preparing for Doctor Appointments

A plain-language guide to getting ready for cancer care appointments — what to bring, how to track your medical information, and how to make sure your questions get answered.

NCI source

Last reviewed: 2026-07-04

The short answer

A little preparation makes cancer appointments far more useful. Bring a written question list, a current list of your medicines, and a way to take notes. Keep your records — pathology reports, scan results, and bills — organized in one place, and bring a trusted person to important visits when you can.

  • Write your questions down before each visit and put the most important ones first.

  • Bring a current list of all medicines, doses, and supplements to every appointment.

  • Take notes during the visit, or bring a family member or friend to listen and take notes for you.

  • Keep your medical records — pathology reports, scan results, discharge summaries — organized in one folder or portal.

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The full explanation.

The simple version

Cancer care involves a lot of appointments, a lot of information, and a lot of paperwork. You cannot control most of that — but a small amount of preparation puts you back in the driver's seat.

Three habits carry most of the weight: bring a written question list, keep one organized set of your medical information, and take notes (or bring someone who will).

Prepared patients get more out of every appointment — and preparation takes minutes, not hours.

Before the appointment

  • Write down your questions and put the most important ones first, in case time runs short. If you're not sure what to ask, see Questions to Ask Your Oncologist.
  • Update your medicine list. Include every prescription, over-the-counter drug, and supplement (vitamins, minerals, herbs, fish oil), with doses. Some supplements can change how cancer treatments work, so your team needs the full list.
  • Note new symptoms or side effects since the last visit — when they started, how often they happen, and what makes them better or worse.
  • Invite a companion. For visits where results or decisions are on the agenda, a family member or friend can listen, take notes, and help you remember. If they can't attend, ask whether they can join by phone.
  • Check the practical details: where to park, which building, whether you need to fast for blood tests, and what to bring.

What to bring

  • your written question list
  • your medicine list
  • your insurance card and photo ID
  • records or results from any care you received elsewhere
  • a notebook or phone for notes
  • something to pass the time — treatment centers often involve waiting

During the appointment

  • Start with your most important questions.
  • Take notes, or ask whether you can record the conversation.
  • Ask for plain language. If a word is unfamiliar, say so. Repeating back what you heard — "So you're saying the scan was stable?" — is a quick way to check understanding.
  • Ask what happens next before you leave: the next appointment, the next test, and what you should do at home in the meantime.
  • Ask who to call if something comes up between visits, and which symptoms should prompt an immediate call rather than waiting.

Never leave an appointment without knowing the next step and who to call with problems.

Keeping your information organized

Cancer care generates a paper trail: pathology reports, scan results, operative reports, discharge summaries, bills, and insurance letters. Keeping it organized pays off every time you see a new doctor, seek a second opinion, or question a bill.

  • Use one folder (paper, digital, or both) for medical records, and another for bills and insurance paperwork.
  • Sign up for the patient portal if your health system has one. You can usually see results, request records, and message your team there.
  • Keep your own copies of pathology reports and treatment summaries — originals stay with the hospital, but you are entitled to copies.
  • Track your care team. Write down the names and roles of your doctors and nurses, and the office numbers for each.

Money questions belong at appointments too

Cancer treatment can be expensive even with insurance, and your team can help more than most people expect — but only if they know. It is normal and appropriate to:

  • tell your team if you are worried about the cost of care
  • ask whether the hospital has a financial counselor, social worker, or patient navigator
  • ask what a recommended test or treatment is likely to cost with your insurance

For more, see Paying for Cancer Treatment.

The takeaway

Preparation is one of the few parts of cancer care that is fully in your hands. A question list, an up-to-date medicine list, organized records, and a note-taker turn appointments from overwhelming to manageable — and help your care team take better care of you.

Words to know

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Common questions

What should I bring to every cancer appointment?

Bring your written question list, a current list of all medicines and supplements with doses, your insurance card, any new test results or records from other doctors, and something to take notes with. Many people also bring a family member or friend.

How should I organize my medical records?

Keep copies of pathology reports, operative reports, scan results, discharge summaries, and treatment summaries together in one folder — paper, digital, or both. Most health systems also offer an online patient portal where you can view and download results. Keeping your own copies makes second opinions and referrals much easier.

What if I don't understand something the doctor says?

Ask. Doctors sometimes use medical words without realizing it, and it is their job to explain. You can say 'Can you explain that in plain language?' or repeat back what you heard to check that you understood.

Should someone come with me to appointments?

For big appointments — hearing results, choosing a treatment — it usually helps. A second set of ears catches things you miss, and a companion can take notes while you focus on the conversation. If nobody can come in person, ask whether they can join by phone.

How do I keep track of everything between appointments?

Keep a running list of new symptoms, side effects, and questions as they come up — a notebook or a notes app works. Bring the list to your next visit. Also write down the names and roles of the people on your care team, and who to call for what.

Is it okay to ask about costs at a medical appointment?

Yes. Your care team wants to know if costs are a burden, because it can affect which options work for you. Ask whether the hospital has a financial counselor, social worker, or patient navigator, and ask what your tests and treatments are likely to cost with your insurance.

Questions to ask your doctor

Being prepared helps you get the most out of your appointments. Save or print these questions.

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Quick quiz

Test your knowledge

0 of 4 answered

  1. Q1.According to this article, which three habits help most in preparing for cancer appointments?
  2. Q2.Why does the article say you should include supplements on your medicine list?
  3. Q3.What does the article say you should always know before leaving an appointment?
  4. Q4.What does the article say about asking cost questions at medical appointments?

This quiz checks understanding of educational content only. It is not medical advice. Open this quiz on its own page.

Related learning map

How this explanation connects to 11 other things you can explore — related topics, terms, questions, practice, and its NCI source.

Preparing for Doctor Appointments