| Home | Heartland Activities | Family History Tools | Resources | Contact Us |
YOU ARE HERE: Home
Your Family Health HistoryYour family history holds important information about your past, and clues to your future health. Knowing your family health history can help determine if you or others in your family may be at increased risk for developing diseases like heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and cancer. Family gatherings, such as holidays, are a great time to catch up on family news and information. They can also provide a good opportunity to learn about your family's health history. This information can help health care providers assess your risk for disease and determine appropriate preventive measures or courses of treatment.
How to Collect and Record Your Family Health HistoryClick the link below to view a video on collecting and recording your family health history. From MO Dept. Health and Senior Services. (Requires Windows Media Player) See our Family Health History Toolkit (PDF file) You can start collecting information by writing down your own health history. Next, move on to your siblings and children, as well as your parents. Going back one generation at a time, gather information on aunts and uncles, nieces and nephews, cousins and grandparents. For more details on what information to collect, and how to obtain it, see our "Family History Tools" page. If you are adopted, you may be able to learn some of your family history through the family that adopted you or from adoption agency records. One way to record a family history is by drawing a family tree called a “pedigree”. This can be done by hand or by using various computer programs. There are many tools available to help you record your family health history in a pedigree. The Surgeon General’s web site includes an online tool, My Family Health Portrait, which allows you to organize and save information on multiple family members, as well as drawing a family tree. It is also available as a download or paper version. See our "Family History Tools" page for more information on how to collect and record a family history, and links to other tools and resources. What to do When You Are DoneFamily health histories should be given to all health care providers and kept as a permanent part of a patient's medical file. You should also share your family health history with your relatives. Meet with your primary healthcare provider to review your family history. Note patterns that occur – multiple close family members with diabetes, for instance. For each health concern, discuss whether there are steps you can take now – such as altering your diet, exercise, or lifestyle habits – to prevent you from being diagnosed with the same problem. Talk to your relatives and encourage them to take the same steps. You should keep your family health history in a safe place and update it regularly (or update it at a regular family gathering, such as Thanksgiving or a family reunion). If you have specific concerns about your family history, it may be helpful to meet with a genetics specialist. You can find genetic professionals in your area by visiting the Clinic Directory on the GeneTests web site (www.genetests.org) or the “Find a Counselor” link on the National Society of Genetic Counselor’s Web site (www.nsgc.org). See our "Resources" page additional information, including links to disease specific resources.
Heartland ActivitiesThe Heartland Regional Genetics and Newborn Screening Collaborative is sponsoring an ongoing educational campaign in our region to promote and coordinate education, increased access to information and tools about Family Health History. Please see the "Heartland Activities" Page for more information on Heartland regional activities, as well as each state's activities. States in our region include: Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and South Dakota. |
| Last updated: 09/27/2007 |
| This web site is supported by a grant from the Genetic Services Branch of the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) of the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) and by the Oklahoma University Health Sciences Center (OUHSC). Grant Number: 1 U22MC03962-01-00 |