Patient Self-Help Guide

Patient Help

Smart Checklist Before Calling or Visiting a Medical Centre

A practical patient-first guide for appointments, fees, documents, insurance, second opinions and emergency limits.

Effective date: June 4, 2026
Last reviewed: June 2026
Website: medicalcentreindia.org/
Medical emergency warning

If you have chest pain, stroke symptoms, severe breathing difficulty, heavy bleeding, severe allergic reaction, poisoning, loss of consciousness, suicidal thoughts, pregnancy emergency, or any life-threatening condition, do not rely on this website. Call India emergency services such as 112/108 where available, go to the nearest emergency department, or contact a qualified doctor immediately.

Before You Call a Medical Centre

Keep the patient’s age, symptoms, location, previous reports and urgency ready. Decide whether you need routine OPD, emergency care, diagnostic test, admission, surgery consultation or follow-up.

What to Ask on the Phone

  1. Is the required department available today? Example: cardiology, gynecology, pediatrics, orthopedics.
  2. Is the doctor available? Ask by doctor name if you have one.
  3. What is the current consultation fee? Ask first visit, follow-up and payment method.
  4. Do I need an appointment? Ask walk-in/token/online booking and reporting time.
  5. What documents should I bring? Ask ID, reports, old prescription, referral and insurance.
  6. Is emergency care available? If urgent, ask if the emergency department is functional now.

Before You Visit

  • Save the centre’s phone number and map location.
  • Carry original reports and photocopies if required.
  • Reach early if token-based OPD is used.
  • Confirm whether fasting is needed for blood tests or scans.
  • Ask whether the patient should avoid food/water only if instructed by the centre.

Billing, Insurance and Cashless Checklist

For planned admission or procedure, contact the billing/TPA desk before admission. Ask whether your insurance is accepted, which documents are required, whether pre-authorisation is needed, what is excluded and whether co-pay applies.

When to Consider a Second Opinion

Consider a second opinion for major surgery, cancer treatment, long-term medicines with serious side effects, expensive procedures, unclear diagnosis, repeated treatment failure or when you do not understand the risk/benefit clearly.

After the Visit

  • Keep prescription, bill, reports and discharge summary safely.
  • Understand medicine timing, side effects and follow-up date.
  • Ask what symptoms require emergency return.
  • Do not ignore worsening symptoms after a consultation.

A prepared patient gets safer, faster help

Use this checklist before calling or visiting any medical centre.

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