Personal medical information in an emergency
A ‘health wallet’ sounds like it would be a traditional binder containing paper sheets.
Well, it can be. But the term has now evolved to mean any practical method of making vital medical information quickly available to medics in a healthcare emergency.
What to include in your health wallet
If you choose the mobile phone option, the phone app will suggest what information to add – see ‘mobile phone sheet‘.
Suggested list
- Your name, address, DoB, and NHS number so that registered medics can then confidentially request information from your medical record.
- Hospital discharge and recent clinic appointment letters – indicates your condition, treatment, progress/deterioration.
- Copy of recent ECG trace – Useful for checking whether observed abnormalities are recent or old.
- Pacemaker or ICD card – You are advised to carry your card at all times so that paramedics are alerted.
- How you currently describe / explain / manage the details of your condition / treatment – Significance of changing symptoms, check up/review dates, nature of teams involved, what appropriate abbreviations mean (trainees may not yet know all of these).
- Current list of medications and known allergies – What are the medications prescribed for? Any recent medication / dose changes? Food or drug allergies and severity?
- Who to contact in an emergency – Person’s name and contact number.
What if I have to call an ambulance from home?
1. Call 999 and listen carefully to the person who answers your call.
2. Don’t go upstairs and don’t go to the toilet if you can avoid it.
3. Open the front door if possible.
4. Leave lights on.
5. If somebody is with you maybe they could watch for the ambulance and beckon the crew to your door.
Useful resources
Wearing a medical ID tag or bracelet (761kB pdf)
Keeping health information on your mobile phone (442kB pdf)
Keeping health information in a Lion's fridge pot (193kB pdf)