Thursday, July 28, 2005

'Dammit Jim, I'm a doctor not a bartender!'

This Tuesday dad was admitted to the hospital right after a routine visit. Dad's primary physician, Dr. Jeff Weber, followed the pain clues and a subsequent MRI scan to reveal a tumor pressing sharply against the spinal cord. This threat is serious- pressure on the spinal cord can cause anything up to and including paralysis, loss of bodily control, and more. And it can happen fast.

Only two options really exist for this situation- radiation or neurosurgery followed by radiation. The latter is a risky and dangerous option that doesn't guarantee any results. According to one doctor here, in a clinical trial involving 100 patients with similar tumors where 50 received surgery and radition and the other 50 only received radiation, there was virtually no difference in survival rate or length of survival after treatment.

The doctors decided to utilize extremely strong, sharply focused radiation to beat the tumor back, shrinking it so as to relieve the pressure against the spine. We just finished the third radiation session a couple hours ago [just to satisfy you comic book junkies- dad hasn't manifested any super powers yet, but he has several more radiation sessions to go].

So right after admission, at least a dozen different doctors, nurses and medical students all come into the room at different times. Most of them asked the same 1-2 dozen questions ("can you feel your feet?" "are you numb anywhere?" "how are your reflexes?") then proceeded to run dad through a series of reflex tests (kindof like the one where they tap your kneecap with a ballpeen hammer, only various and different). The general consensus was a) this guy is a seriously tough dude to be walking around in so much pain, b) he's got complete functionality of his body, c) he's strong as a horse, all things considered and d) man, can this guy play guitar or what. The docs said radiation makes the most sense, no surgery at this time.

So the next day (yesterday), in walks a neurosurgeon that apparently had not consulted with dad's primary doc and begins to describe in all the gory detail what the surgery would be like, cutting into this, through that, from both sides, etc. He even states that once the surgery is completed, anything could still go [horribly] wrong. Then he states more or less that he hopes dad does not need his services. OK, so dad's sitting there, pretty much horrified and agast. What was this guy thinking?

After this guy leaves, you can imagine the state of mind dad was in. All of the doctors, nurses and staff to follow found a patient who had been shocked into the most severly negative state of mind, and for good reason. It took Dr. Weber and a few other doctors and nurses some time and energy to get dad back into shape again. All because this other doctor didn't say "I'm going to get a little graphic on you, because it's my job to do so. Are you ready?" before beginning.

That doctor's been since described as suffering from a congenital lack of bedside manner (Think of Bones on the original Enterprise, only Vulcan instead of Human). The lesson learned here is that one of the challenges a patient must face when battling a disease can be the personality of a left-brained, well-educated and superbly trained doctor on whom one relies for survival. I am not angry at the doctor. It's his job to be honest and completely up front. I thank him and his colleagues every day for saving my dad's life.

7 comments:

Margie Mirken said...

At first I was mad and wanted to smack the insensitive doc up alongside the head with a fryig pan. I've mellowed now--after all, he's just a person like you or me. Anyone can insert both feet simultaneously into a dieseling mouth. And it is true that doc nerds do need some music in their souls, as it says in the comment on Greg's recent post. Thank God for the power of French toast to sooth a savage mind.
Margie

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