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MB's avatar

I had a just-in-time colonoscopy but it took six months between knowing something was wrong, convincing the GP that something was wrong and it wasn’t just me being fat, getting the appointment with the Gastro, and finding out hey so glad you called we just pulled out some cancer.

My mother, a colon cancer survivor, always said that if everyone who participated in a “cancer walk” would commit instead to drive a person to and from their procedure, more people would be saved, since that can be a huge barrier and very awkward ask.

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Meg's avatar

About two and a half years ago my partner started experiencing some blood in his stool. Doctor told him it was likely hemorrhoids, not to worry. There was no follow up. The bleeding came and went and my partner has a history of getting hemorrhoids, so we accepted that. But then it kept happening. So finally in early 2020 we were able to convince his primary care doc to refer him for a colonoscopy. Insurance wouldn’t cover it solely because of his age (it was about $1200 out of pocket), nevermind the fact that his mother had been diagnosed with colorectal cancer about six months earlier.

Then the pandemic hit, and his colonoscopy was rescheduled. I finally forced the issue to get it back on the books. Sure enough, they found cancer, and after some scans they found it had moved to the liver as well. Stage 4.

In the past two years he has been through pelvic radiation, chemo, liver resection, more chemo, low anterior resection and ostomy, and ostomy reversal. His last scan, in December, was clean.

Don’t ever let anyone, whether they have a degree or not, downplay something in your body that you know isn’t right. And honestly, it’s ok to be a pain in the ass (ha!) to get the medical care you need. In hindsight, I wish I had worried less about being nice and trusting and had forced the issue from the beginning. Our healthcare system tends to be adversarial, putting up multiple roadblocks to care. You really have to get comfortable asserting yourself, because no one knows what’s going on in your body better than you do.

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