I've been told by hospital doctors to bring my other half along to hospital appointments before. I've asked friends who are doctors why that is. They've told me that, more often than not, it is the partner who provides vital information when they are taking a history. And it is the partner who is in a state of mind to then better understand what the doctor is saying.
Remember, a doctor isn’t just for treating ill health, but also for perpetuating existing systems of social inequality and hierarchy!
Quote from: seankenny on January 15, 2024, 01:13:52 pmRemember, a doctor isn’t just for treating ill health, but also for perpetuating existing systems of social inequality and hierarchy! what?
I think some doctors want the best for their patients whilst simultaneously excluding some people from the circle of patients. Minimising pain or psychologising physical illness effectively do just this, allowing the doctor to treat “real” patients and ignore others quite easily.
General poorer outcomes for women, ethnic minorities, lower income people.
All this stuff is well known and shown in research; if they were entirely about evidence and patient health then they’d take it on board, surely?
She managed to persuade him to book into the GP sooner and has managed to get an urgent (within 2 weeks) referral for a gastrointestinal specialist appointment.
Hi James.I'm an anaesthetic/intensive care doctor, so not at all a specialist in this area, and also in ICU we tend to see the worst-case scenarios rather than more common outcomes/presentations, so my view on things may be somewhat skewed.It sounds like you and your step-mum have taken some really sensible steps in persuading him to push for further investigations, and I do think that the 2-week referral is appropriate at this stage.For what it's worth, 8 weeks is not that long in terms of your body's recovery from a nasty bout of anything... Depending on the nature of his initial illness it may have been reasonable for the GP to give it a bit longer to see if it settled. (For example, after severe gastroenteritis it is not uncommon to get a degree of malabsorption for a few weeks which can give similar symptoms to what your dad has had.) Having said that, 8-12 weeks is definitely a bit of a turning point for symptoms being defined as "chronic" (ie longer lasting), and it's harder to put continued weight loss down to something that happened a couple of months ago.I don't wish to alarm you, and the combination of symptoms your dad has could be due to any of a very long list of diseases, but the reason he's been referred within a 2-week window is because some of his symptoms can be signs of cancer. In fact - and this is for everyone else - given that one in three of us will get cancer at some point in our lives, if anyone over 60 develops new/unusual symptoms which last more than 4-6 weeks, cancer will almost often be somewhere near the top of the list of possibilities. I've just turned 40 and am increasingly considering myself as an "older adult" from this point of view, not least because my cousin recently got diagnosed (and successfully treated) with kidney cancer after a single episode of blood in his urine, having never in his life had that before, and being fit as a fiddle. Cancer is a scary word, but that shouldn't prevent us from talking about it and raising awareness, because awareness genuinely saves lives.I really hope your dad gets the answers and treatment he needs. Good luck and well done for advocating for him.
I don't wish to alarm you, and the combination of symptoms your dad has could be due to any of a very long list of diseases, but the reason he's been referred within a 2-week window is because some of his symptoms can be signs of cancer. In fact - and this is for everyone else - given that one in three of us will get cancer at some point in our lives, if anyone over 60 develops new/unusual symptoms which last more than 4-6 weeks, cancer will almost often be somewhere near the top of the list of possibilities. I've just turned 40 and am increasingly considering myself as an "older adult" from this point of view, not least because my cousin recently got diagnosed (and successfully treated) with kidney cancer after a single episode of blood in his urine, having never in his life had that before, and being fit as a fiddle. Cancer is a scary word, but that shouldn't prevent us from talking about it and raising awareness, because awareness genuinely saves lives.