grief

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This is a response, mostly crafted on Facebook, to some of the panic over the recently released breast cancer screening guidelines. I’m surprised this is coming to a head now, because I was reading about the shift in screening recommendations back in July. In October, the New York Times headline was Cancer Society, in Shift, Has Concerns on Screenings. (And of course, I feel I need to add a note on cervical cancer screenings. The Stranger Slog had a nice reaction piece to all the hubbub, too.)

First, some definitions from my Apple Dictionary.

sig・nif・i・cance |sigˈnifikəns|
noun
1 the quality of being worthy of attention; importance : adolescent education was felt to be a social issue of some significance.
2 the meaning to be found in words or events : the significance of what was happening was clearer to me than to her.
3 (also statistical significance) the extent to which a result deviates from that expected to arise simply from random variation or errors in sampling.

an・ec・dote |ˈanikˌdōt|
noun
a short and amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person : told anecdotes about his job | he had a rich store of anecdotes.
• an account regarded as unreliable or hearsay : his wife’s death has long been the subject of rumor and anecdote.
• the depiction of a minor narrative incident in a painting.

The major issue is that people will cite anecdotes, and that anecdotes are a part of the statistics, but anecdotes are not necessarily statistically significant. This is an emotionally charged subject regarding life and death. We are so averse to death and dying that it is unlikely one of us would say “in the face of death, I would choose to do nothing if I had knowledge to do so.” The fact is that we will all die, and it’s just a matter of when and how. I posit that there is no “good time” to die or be dying. Cancer is a situation where we know of someone who has survived, and we know someone who has succumbed. We look at survival as the success, death as the failure. Maybe we didn’t do enough or have the right treatment? Or maybe that’s just the way it works. A person who survives cancer will still die another day, albeit later and possibly of something else.

Statistics can only tell you what is. When the efficacy of treatment is not “statistically significant” it doesn’t mean that 0 people get better and 0 people get worse/die. It means that the numbers of those treated that get better or die, and those that aren’t treated that get better or die are such a small percentage as to not make a real difference to the total number of people impacted.

The issue here is an emotional one, not one for the numbers. The issue is that the person who dies because of being treated too aggressively, too early for a cancer that wasn’t as serious may be some child’s mother. The person who dies because the cancer spread too fast and was detected too late, and could have been detected on a mammogram is another child’s mother. Two different people. Both anecdotal. One woman might have been saved by the new recommendations. One woman might have been saved by the old recommendations. When that “one woman” is your loved one, you don’t care about statistics. You just want to make it better, whatever it is. Statistically speaking, it’s a wash.

No person cares about the numbers when they’re the one it happens to. The March of Dimes states that 1 in 160 pregnant women experience stillbirth. I am the 1/160 of pregnant women. 0.625%. And this is just the statistic that stillbirth happens to, not the statistic for the type of/cause of stillbirth. When those factors are added in, my odds are not too dissimilar as the odds for being struck by lightning.

I can’t care about statistics in the face of grief. Statistics don’t make any sense to me, or to my heart, when I’m the one it happens to. I know that I, and those I love, would have done anything within our power to keep it from happening. The truth is, though, that even after dozens of tests and exams, there is absolutely no cause discerned and no definitive preventative measure that could have stopped it. Statistics offer no comfort when you’re the one impacted. It can, however, offer some perspective. Knowing where I am statistically helps me know that I’m not alone, even if I’m a statistic of an already smaller statistic of the population (woman, child-bearing age, history of pregnancy). It means I’m not the only one in my neighborhood. It means I’m not alone.

Anecdotes are important. They describe our human experience of the statistics, transcending the numbers, and helping us relate to each other on our squishiest, most vulnerable levels. They only tell part of the story, though. We love to share our stories of triumph, and there are others who love to relate the stories of those who have died, who might have lived “if only” something had been different. We can never know, though, if any of those “if only” situations would have made a difference. Earlier this year a friend of mine who is undergoing cancer treatment found out that his treatment triggered a rare and often fatal condition that ended up ravaging his kidneys and requiring him to have multiple blood transfusions and dialysis. Aggressive cancer treatment can be fatal. Cancer can be fatal. Cancer treatment is the choice to risk death by treatment or death from cancer, neither of which are certain. It’s important to weigh your odds and your options.

Finally, I’ll posit that maybe the real fear of these guidelines has less to do with the guidelines themselves, and more to do with our current health care system. I hear over and over again that people are afraid of their care being rationed. They’re afraid that their insurance, wherever it may come from, won’t cover the treatment that will save their life. People don’t want their options taken from them. They want to still be able to get their mammograms and PAP smears when they or their doctor think it’s appropriate. They don’t want their insurance provider telling them what’s covered and when they will have access to the tests. I can certainly understand that fear. To add to this part, though Consumer Reports cited Dartmouth research which found

…that patients with serious conditions who are treated in regions that provide the most aggressive medical care—more tests and procedures, more specialists, and more days in the hospital—don’t live longer or enjoy a better quality of life than those who receive more conservative treatment.

Patients treated most aggressively are at increased risk of infections and medical errors that come from uncoordinated care, such as doctors prescribing drugs that duplicate or interact with other drugs. They also tend to receive poorer care, spend a lot more money for co-payments, and are the least satisfied with their health care, the Dartmouth researchers found.

Statistics are a bitch sometimes, aren’t they?

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She had a look on her face that read of fresh crying, and the latent ability to tear up at any second. I only know of her through brief encounters, and consider her a friend-of-place, the kind of friends we make between the specific hours of sharing space, and keep no contact once we part. I hadn’t seen her for awhile, so I welcomed her (late) arrival.

I’m naturally nosy and interested in the human condition, this is what led me to professional social work. This was not a professional circumstance, and yet, within moments of asking what was going on, I slipped into the standards, “How much sleep are you getting every night?” “When these mood shifts happen, how long do they last?” I stepped back within myself when I caught myself cutting into her talking to me with a question unrelated to what she was saying.

I was more concerned with checking off symptoms on my list (in order to find the cause and solution) than just listening to her. Have I always been this way? Is this not the same kind of treatment that disgusted me when I was in the consumer’s chair?

I’m not the only one to have done this and been caught. A few weeks ago, while sharing my art class table with two other people (all with human services history), we discussed how we’ve observed others in the therapy profession, in casual conversation, pull out their stock questions. We hope we’re never the ones doing that, but it’s impossible to not do it sometimes.

I’m grateful I caught myself when I did. I realized today that asking the stock questions, filling out the psychosocial evaluation and treatment plan in my head, fills me with a sense of competence. I know how to do this. Even better, if I know how to do this, certainly I know how to make this person’s pain abate! These questions – the professional in me – feels empowered, but also safely distanced from sitting in the pain that is right in front of me.

I had to acknowledge to my friend that the finest distillation of this situation was the fact that it sucks. It sucks, it’s here, it feels bad, and that’s all there is to it. Channeling my inner Pema Chodron, and crying a few tears of my own, I asked her if a friend came to her in pain, would she tell her she wasn’t working hard enough, was lazy, was a failure, and all that other bad stuff we tell ourselves. She agreed that she wouldn’t do that to a friend, that she’d be kind, generous, and care for that person. I tear up just thinking about it, because that kindness and compassion is what she (and I) lack in ourselves. So many people are good friends to others, and horrible friends to themselves. And Pema Chodron would of course remind, I’d imagine, to not get on ourselves about how horrible we can be about being good to ourselves – but rather just let it go. What’s going on right now? I’m hunched in my chair, my neck is tight, I’m looking forward to lying down in bed. There is no failure in this moment.

We both cried. She thanked me later for listening, but because I didn’t have those forms filled out in my head, I’m still not sure if I did the right thing, or if I helped ease her pain at all. I joked that our encounter was ultimately self-serving. I don’t like seeing people in pain, so I have this tendency to try to fix the problem so they’re not in pain anymore. She dismissed this idea.

Speaking for myself, one of the best things someone did for me this past year was just sit there and let me cry, and talk, and cry some more. It was the best therapy I could ask for, and therapy I didn’t have to pay for. It’s the kind of thing that the four therapists I’ve tried so far this year would take a hint from. It’s not about filling out the forms and getting the most intimate information within the first two sessions. Sometimes it’s about sitting there and knowing that there may not be a solution or anything to solve, but there is this moment, right now, surrounding you. As terrifying as that may be sometimes, stopping and just sharing in that can do wonders.

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There’s a baby clothing and crap company called One Step Ahead. I wouldn’t have known about it if they hadn’t started sending me catalogs a few months ago, along with Pottery Barn Kids. To this day, I don’t know how I got on their mailing lists. What I do know, though, is that their unwanted mail seems somehow cruel and horrible as a mother of a stillborn. I have already requested One Step Ahead to remove me from their list, however – I just got their most recent catalog.

I’m sure that someone out there thinks that sending endless forests of paper marketing to people’s mailboxes is a great way to sell stuff. Let me give you my personal guarantee – if you spam me, if you send me any solicitation that I did not initially sign up for, and if you STILL send me more after I’ve asked you to stop, you are NEVER going to get my business. EVER.

(True fact: this includes politicians. I swore not to ever support Mallahan for Mayor specifically because he sent me unwanted email spam. That, and he’s a corporate tool.)

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Jon forwarded me this recent New York Times article, Survey Finds High Fees Common in Medical Care, and I’ve finally gotten around to blogging it today.

A patient in Illinois was charged $12,712 for cataract surgery. Medicare pays $675 for the same procedure. In California, a patient was charged $20,120 for a knee operation that Medicare pays $584 for. And a New Jersey patient was charged $72,000 for a spinal fusion procedure that Medicare covers for $1,629

This is not unfamiliar to me. While being induced at Swedish Medical Center – Ballard, I was offered an epidural after nearly 30 hours of being there. Up to that point, I had been offered opiates for pain control, but I wasn’t liking it – and I’m sure they didn’t seem too keen to pony up to “whatever medication you want” that they had promised. (For a reference point, this was for a stillbirth, in case some of you are just tuning in.) The anesthesiologist was happy to help lay my fears to rest about the procedure, and I eventually relented – to the tune of $9000. Why do hospital births cost many thousands more than birth-center births (not that this was even an option for me at the time)? I’m guessing because of the epidural. I was told by some friends that their epidurals only cost in the $1500 range, and after some quick Googling, I found some that were even charged less. Luckily, insurance has covered much of the cost of my hospital stay, however, the cost of childbirth especially stings when you walk away with empty arms.

The health insurers, saying they felt unfairly vilified, gave the report to The New York Times before posting it online on Tuesday, explaining that they wanted to show that doctors’ fees are part of the health care problem.

This doesn’t surprise me. After my stillbirth I was seen days later in the Swedish Ballard ER for a Deep Vein Thrombosis, which turned out that I was at an in-network facility with then, out-of-network physicians serving the ER. Part of what I understand to have been the issue between the Ballard Emergency Physicians (the contracted ER physicians for Swedish Medical Center – Ballard) and Premera was that the BEP wanted more money, and Premera wasn’t having any of it. This meant that when the BEP dropped their agreement with Premera, they could charge unlucky people such as myself (and many others, being that Premera is the largest insurer in the state), whatever they saw fit. This meant, that in one case I’m personally aware of, two identical visits, for the same problem at the same time of day, had a $1000 difference in charges.

Premera is well within their right to write their contract as they see fit. They also have the goal of staying profitable, which means that they’ll draw the line as to what they’ll pay for and what they won’t.

But Dr. Robert M. Wah, a spokesman for the American Medical Association, said there was another side to the story: insurers’ low payments to doctors who enter into contracts with them and the doctors’ difficulties, in many cases, in getting paid at all. That is why, he said, doctors may simply abandon insurance plans. Then patients end up with extra fees because they have to go outside their networks.

I remember once having some issue with coverage of my naturopath’s services. It finally got settled, but one of the grumblings I heard from the office manager was that they had issues with one of the Blue Cross affiliated insurers paying them in a timely fashion, if at all. This can obviously be an issue, though I’m not sure the answer is completely over-charging others as they see fit to make up the difference.

I’ll let you go to the article to read the rest. The article lays out pretty much exactly what I’ve been talking about on this blog regarding my own experience between a hospital and an insurance company, even covering similar efforts by others to both individually and legislatively change the system to be more transparent, and offer some opportunities to regulate some of these high costs.

Health care reform matters. I’d prefer there not have to be legislation to change the status quo. I prefer that in just about every case it can be imagined. However, this madness has gone on long enough. No matter what loud people in town halls are saying.*

*see upcoming disclaimer on this.

See previously under the Ballard Emergency Physicians tag.

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Goodwill Donation

1 white, bird beaked mask
1 shiny, rainbow eye mask
1 pair of black fairy wings
1 shiney, glowy, spinny wand
1 white towel
2 Christian books on stillbirth and grieving (like new)
1 Prenatal yoga DVD
2 small glass flower globes
2 large glass flower vases
1 wood and glass flower holder
1 wooden condiment holder

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