By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

General Medical Practice Intake Forms: What Primary Care Offices Need to Capture

A new patient walks into your primary care office for an initial visit. Before anyone checks a blood pressure or opens a chart, there is a stack of information that needs to move from the patient's head into your system — accurately, completely, and in a format your clinical and billing staff can actually use. The intake form is the instrument that makes that transfer happen. If it is thin, you spend the first ten minutes of the appointment backfilling data that should have been captured in the waiting room. If it is disorganized, your staff re-keys information that was already written down somewhere else on the same form. If it is missing entire categories — no review of systems, no preventive care history, no pharmacy information — your clinician is flying partially blind.

A well-built general medical practice intake form captures everything a primary care physician, family medicine practice, or internal medicine office needs to begin a patient relationship: demographics for identification and communication, insurance for billing, a complete medical history for clinical decision-making, a review of systems for the initial assessment, preventive care status for screening gaps, and the HIPAA and consent documentation that federal law requires before you treat. Here is what each section should include and why it matters.

Patient demographics: identification, communication, and federal reporting

Demographics are not just a name and address. In a general medical practice, they serve three distinct functions — clinical identification, communication logistics, and regulatory compliance — and your intake form needs to capture enough detail to serve all three.

Insurance and billing: the information that determines whether you get paid

Insurance errors are the single largest source of claim denials in primary care. A transposed digit in a member ID, a subscriber date of birth that does not match the payer's records, or a missing authorization number can delay payment by weeks. Your intake form should capture insurance information in enough detail that your billing staff can verify eligibility before the patient sees the provider.

Medical history: the clinical foundation of the patient relationship

The medical history section is the core of a general medical intake form. For a primary care physician, this is the data that shapes every clinical decision going forward — what to screen for, what to monitor, what to avoid prescribing, what red flags to watch for. A thin medical history section produces a thin clinical picture, and that means missed diagnoses, drug interactions, and screening gaps.

Chief complaint

The reason for today's visit, in the patient's own words. This is a free-text field, not a checkbox. "I've been having headaches for two weeks" tells the clinician something very different from "annual physical" or "medication refill." For established patients, the chief complaint drives the visit structure. For new patients, it provides immediate clinical context before the provider opens the chart.

Current medications

Every medication the patient is currently taking — name, dose, frequency, and prescriber. This includes prescription medications, over-the-counter drugs (ibuprofen, acetaminophen, antacids, sleep aids), vitamins, and supplements (fish oil, vitamin D, melatonin, herbal products like St. John's Wort or turmeric). Supplements are clinically relevant because they interact with prescription medications — St. John's Wort reduces the effectiveness of oral contraceptives and certain antidepressants, and fish oil potentiates blood thinners. Patients routinely omit supplements unless the form explicitly asks for them.

Allergies

Two categories, captured separately:

Past medical history

A chronic conditions checklist is the most efficient way to capture this. The patient checks every condition they have been diagnosed with, and the provider reviews it during the visit. Your checklist should include at minimum: diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2), hypertension, asthma or COPD, heart disease (coronary artery disease, heart failure, arrhythmia), stroke or TIA, cancer (with type and year of diagnosis), thyroid disorder (hypo or hyper), kidney disease, liver disease, autoimmune conditions (lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, MS), mental health diagnoses (depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, PTSD), seizure disorder, bleeding disorder, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis (A, B, or C), and tuberculosis (active or latent).

Past surgical history

Procedure name, approximate date, and any complications. Surgical history is relevant for everything from anesthesia planning to understanding a patient's abdominal anatomy (post-cholecystectomy patients present differently with right upper quadrant pain) to knowing whether a patient has implanted hardware (joint replacements, pacemakers, surgical mesh) that affects imaging orders.

Hospitalizations

Reason for admission, approximate date, and facility name. Facility name matters because your office may need to request records, and knowing where the patient was hospitalized tells you which health system's records to pursue.

Family medical history

Mother, father, siblings, and grandparents — for each, whether they have or had heart disease, stroke, cancer (type), diabetes, hypertension, mental illness, or substance abuse. If deceased, cause of death and age at death. Family history directly drives screening decisions: a patient whose father had a heart attack at 45 needs earlier and more aggressive cardiovascular screening than the general population. A patient whose mother had colon cancer at 50 should begin colonoscopy screening at 40, not 45. This section is where the evidence-based screening intervals are individualized to the patient.

Social history

Social history is clinical data, not small talk. Each of these fields informs specific clinical decisions:

Review of systems: the structured symptom inventory

The review of systems is a systematic, head-to-toe symptom survey that identifies problems the patient may not have mentioned as part of their chief complaint. A patient who comes in for a medication refill may not volunteer that they have been having night sweats for a month — but the review of systems catches it. Your intake form should present this as a checkbox grid organized by organ system:

The review of systems is where intake forms for general medical practices diverge from specialty practices. A dermatology intake form expands the skin section into a detailed lesion inventory with body-map diagrams. A pediatrics intake form restructures the entire review of systems around developmental milestones, growth percentiles, and age-appropriate behavioral screening. The general medical intake captures all systems at a survey level because primary care is, by definition, the starting point — the place where a positive finding in any system triggers a deeper workup or a specialty referral.

Preventive care and screening history

Primary care is the only specialty where the provider is responsible for the patient's entire preventive care timeline. Your intake form should capture the current status of every age- and risk-appropriate screening so your provider can identify gaps during the first visit:

HIPAA, consent, and communication preferences

Federal law requires specific acknowledgments and authorizations before you can treat a patient and share their information. These are not optional fields — they are compliance requirements, and your intake form is where you document that they were completed:

The intake form as the foundation of the patient-provider relationship

In primary care, the intake form is not paperwork — it is the first clinical act of the patient-provider relationship. The information captured on this form determines whether your provider walks into the exam room with a complete picture or a partial one. It determines whether your billing team submits a clean claim or one that bounces back for missing subscriber information. It determines whether your office can contact the patient's pharmacy, reach their emergency contact, and request their records from their previous provider — or whether those tasks require a follow-up call that takes staff time and delays care.

A comprehensive intake form also communicates professionalism. When a new patient fills out a form that asks about their advance directives, their immunization history, and their preferred pronouns, they understand that this practice takes thorough, patient-centered care seriously. That first impression shapes the entire relationship.

If your practice covers the full range of primary care — from well visits to chronic disease management to preventive screening — the Healthcare Bundle includes general medical practice alongside 20 other healthcare specialties, each with specialty-specific intake fields tailored to its clinical workflow.

General medical practice intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Patient demographics, insurance verification, full medical and surgical history, family history, social history, review of systems, preventive screening status, and HIPAA consent. Built for primary care, family medicine, and internal medicine offices.

View General Medical Practice Forms