Your Treatment Plan

There is not one treatment plan for vasculitis that works for everyone. Successfully treating vasculitis requires collaboration between you and your healthcare providers. Most forms of vasculitis are chronic. This means that while you may go through periods when your vasculitis is quiet and you don’t need treatment (remission), your vasculitis is not cured and may become active again (flare or relapse). Medical professionals will always be a part of your life, so it is important to build a treatment team you trust.


FIND A DOCTOR


Building Your Treatment Team

Some forms of vasculitis can impact many different systems in your body. To effectively treat your vasculitis, you may need a team of medical providers and specialists working together to coordinate your care.

Specialists

Choosing Your Treatment Team Lead

Every good team needs a leader, someone who knows the big picture and is willing to make decisions. Many people with vasculitis choose their rheumatologist as their team lead. However, you may choose a different medical professional as team lead based on what body system is most impacted by your vasculitis or your relationship with your healthcare providers.

Role of the Treatment Team Lead

Preparing for Your Appointment

Preparing for a visit with your healthcare provider? Make sure you have these ready to go:


Some Possible Questions:


Before you leave, make sure you:

Making Treatment Decisions

Your treatment plan should be a collaboration between you and your healthcare team. The more you know about vasculitis and the available treatments, the better able you will be to weigh the pros and cons of different treatment options and work with your healthcare team to design a plan that aligns with your values, preferences, and goals.

Learn all you can about your form of vasculitis and the available treatment options.

Assembling Your Health History

Electronic health records have not replaced the need for you to keep an accurate record of your personal health history. This is even more important when you have a rare autoimmune disease. You and your care partners will need to be able to quickly share your health history with medical staff.

Our Navigating Your Vasculitis Journey guidebook is a wonderful resource. The guidebook contains an entire section on writing your health history. This guidebook was developed by a mental health professional who is also living with vasculitis.

Where should you keep your health history? Use whatever system works best for you. Some people use a binder while others prefer an app on their phone.

What should you include?

The My Health Journey tracker contains 40 sample tracking sheets and logs for:

Advocating for Yourself with Healthcare Providers

[youtube-feed feed=34]