Find clinic locations for Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics and services in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
Find services offered by Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
We encourage you, our patient, concerned family member, or area employer to review Fort HealthCare’s information
We coordinate community education and health-related events and screenings for the Fort HealthCare service area.
Chances are a migraine has caused you to miss work, leave work early, or made you unable to function while at work. When a migraine strikes, it can be nearly impossible to focus on anything. You may feel guilty about how your migraines affect your job performance and your relationship with coworkers and managers. You may have been afraid to tell them that you have migraines. Yet the key to managing migraines and work is communication.
It’s important to let coworkers and managers know about your condition and educate them about it. Here are some ideas for initiating effective communication:
Educate your coworkers. Those who don’t suffer from migraines often don’t have any idea how debilitating the symptoms can be. Ask your healthcare provider for pamphlets about migraine to share with coworkers. Tell managers that you are working with your healthcare provider to keep your migraines under control.
Talk with your manager. Ask about adapting your work environment to minimize migraine triggers. Find out if it's possible to have access to a dark, quiet room to treat migraines.
Be honest. Acknowledge that your migraines can be disabling and that it is frustrating for you to miss work. Let coworkers know that migraines affect all aspects of your life, and that you miss out on leisure activities as well as work when a migraine hits.
Keep communication open. Talk with your coworkers and managers about how you will handle missed time from work. Perhaps you can work from home, make up hours when you feel well, or set up a system with a coworker to cover important tasks for one another when one of you is absent.
Join a migraine support group. It may help you to talk with others who have migraines about how they handle their work situations. Check with a local hospital for a group in your area.
Talk with your healthcare provider. Tell them about the impact of migraines on your work. They can help you with prevention methods and with using abortive medicine to stop a migraine as soon as you feel one starting.
Dealing with migraines is hard enough without keeping it to yourself at work. You may find that talking openly about them will make work less stressful for everyone.