Migraine Doctor Appointment Checklist: The Data That Makes Visits More Productive
Migraine appointments can feel rushed, especially when you are trying to remember what happened over the last few months. A one-page summary helps you lead with the details that are most useful for a clinician.
Bring these four things
- Monthly migraine-day count: include days with head pain and days dominated by migraine symptoms or recovery, using the definitions your clinician recommends.
- Medication timeline: list acute and preventive medicines, doses if you know them, timing, response, and any side effects. Do not change medication without medical advice.
- Functional impact: note missed work, cancelled plans, screen limits, sleep disruption, or days you could not safely drive or focus.
- Your top questions: write down three questions before the visit, such as what to try next, what to do for a recurring early symptom, or when to follow up.
A simple way to phrase the problem
Specific language often helps: “I had 11 migraine days last month,” “I took acute medication on six days,” or “light sensitivity made me leave work twice.” Those sentences give more information than “it happens a lot,” and they make it easier to decide what needs attention first.
If you have any sudden, severe, new, or unusual symptoms, seek urgent medical assessment rather than waiting for a routine appointment.
Keep the history ready between visits
Claru keeps migraine days, symptoms, medication timing, and possible patterns in one place so you can export or review your history before a visit.
For related help, read our headache diary guide and doctor warning signs guide.
This article is educational and does not replace personal medical advice.