Art
11-20-2022, 09:51
I hadn't posted about this much though a few on these forums do know my complete situation.
A year ago i was diagnosed with a rare situation, though not a rare cancer. I have advanced Thyroid cancer that had spread to the bones. A very rare situation. I know docs, though not cancer docs, who had never heard of thyroid cancer with bone metastisis. Fortunately I have a long standing relationship with MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, possibly the best hospital of its kind, due to another issue which has been resolved. My primary doctor at MD Anderson is an endocrinologist who was on the team that developed the only known treatment for my problem and wrote the monograph on it. Lucky me right :headbang:.
So basically I have an issue that isn't curable but is manageable at least until the drug they are using on me stops working. As a result, while I'm still sick, my ability to move around and enjoy life has improved a lot. An MD Anderson cardiologist I had to sit with early on told me that I had a good attitude going for me and his advice was to as much as possible "live your life" which only re inforced my attitude about the whole thing anyhow.
So what have I learned:
Get the best care available that you can afford. It makes a difference on a lot of levels. For example, My first bone biopsy was inconclusive but came back with a diagnosis of prostate cancer which I had been treated successfully for before. Very unusual for a guy whose PSA is undetectable. It only took them a week to correct that and find the real culprit but if the missed diagnoses had been followed up on and I'd been treated for prostate cancer I'd be in a fine pickle to say the least. Fortunately the staff there realised there was a problem with the initial diagnosis right away and did further tests (bone biopsy on a different site) to get it right.
Don't scrimp on insurance. I have Medicare part A&B and Federal Government Blue Cross Blue Shield. The Federal Blue Cross Blue Shield costs a hell of a lot more than your average gap plan (I pay about $6,500.00 a year in premiums) and doesn't pay more than they do but it got me into MD Anderson. MD Anderson is a part of the University of Texas System but has steadily whittled down the insurance plans they accept. In fact I understand they don't accept most insurance any more. Well everybody, and I mean everybody takes Fed. BC/BS. A huge proportion of MD Anderson patients are rich foreigners and self insured Americans who pay cash on the line. It annoys me that MD Anderson has become so restrictive on insurance, they are not a private hospital but part of the UT system which is part of the State of Texas. The result of my insurance situation is I haven't payed a dime out of pocket since I've been there. This is a very good thing since the insurance payout for the exotic oral chemo therapy I take was $144,000.00 for ten months. Now think of the fix I'd be in if I had even a 20% co pay :icon_e_surprised:.
Get your drugs from a pharmacy that has a Specialty Pharmacy operation within it starting now. The co pay for my chemo therapy drug from a non specialty formula would have been in the thousands of dollars. The MD Anderson pharmacist who called me told me my pharmacy (CVS) has a Specialty Pharmacy branch and that would cut the co pay to less than $100.00 which is, under the circumstances better than a sharp stick in the eye. Well it turned out my co pay was nothing which is a whole hell of a lot better than a sharp stick in the eye.
Stay in shape. Early on I lost a lot of weight and it was mostly muscle mass. Yup, no appetite. Well I got my self a dumb bell set and I use it. I big tumor on my hip and the tumors on my spine had me almost paralised but now thanks to MD Anderson's fabulous Physical Therapy department and some diligent exercise I've gone from barely mobile to being able to walk on my own though with quite a limp. Out of the house for short distances I'll use a cane and If I'm going to be moving more than 50 or 60 yards I still take "wonder walker." I'm phobic about falls and a fall that would shatter my extremely compromised left pelvis is a worse thought than any other possibility.
Be grateful for your friends. People who show up when you're real sick are a pearl beyond price.
This one is real important. Have a positive attitude. I wake up every morning and thank God for waking up and for being about 75% functional with bearable pain. This will make you better company and really does facilitate living your life to the best extent possible. I'm going trap shooting with our daughter on Tuesday, first time I'll have shot a shotgun since being sick. That's another milestone. I have hopes of going duck hunting with her (guided hunt of course) in January if I don't suddenly get sicker or hurt myself.
Realizing you have limited time can actually intensify the pleasure you have in the moment. Never forget that.
A year ago i was diagnosed with a rare situation, though not a rare cancer. I have advanced Thyroid cancer that had spread to the bones. A very rare situation. I know docs, though not cancer docs, who had never heard of thyroid cancer with bone metastisis. Fortunately I have a long standing relationship with MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, possibly the best hospital of its kind, due to another issue which has been resolved. My primary doctor at MD Anderson is an endocrinologist who was on the team that developed the only known treatment for my problem and wrote the monograph on it. Lucky me right :headbang:.
So basically I have an issue that isn't curable but is manageable at least until the drug they are using on me stops working. As a result, while I'm still sick, my ability to move around and enjoy life has improved a lot. An MD Anderson cardiologist I had to sit with early on told me that I had a good attitude going for me and his advice was to as much as possible "live your life" which only re inforced my attitude about the whole thing anyhow.
So what have I learned:
Get the best care available that you can afford. It makes a difference on a lot of levels. For example, My first bone biopsy was inconclusive but came back with a diagnosis of prostate cancer which I had been treated successfully for before. Very unusual for a guy whose PSA is undetectable. It only took them a week to correct that and find the real culprit but if the missed diagnoses had been followed up on and I'd been treated for prostate cancer I'd be in a fine pickle to say the least. Fortunately the staff there realised there was a problem with the initial diagnosis right away and did further tests (bone biopsy on a different site) to get it right.
Don't scrimp on insurance. I have Medicare part A&B and Federal Government Blue Cross Blue Shield. The Federal Blue Cross Blue Shield costs a hell of a lot more than your average gap plan (I pay about $6,500.00 a year in premiums) and doesn't pay more than they do but it got me into MD Anderson. MD Anderson is a part of the University of Texas System but has steadily whittled down the insurance plans they accept. In fact I understand they don't accept most insurance any more. Well everybody, and I mean everybody takes Fed. BC/BS. A huge proportion of MD Anderson patients are rich foreigners and self insured Americans who pay cash on the line. It annoys me that MD Anderson has become so restrictive on insurance, they are not a private hospital but part of the UT system which is part of the State of Texas. The result of my insurance situation is I haven't payed a dime out of pocket since I've been there. This is a very good thing since the insurance payout for the exotic oral chemo therapy I take was $144,000.00 for ten months. Now think of the fix I'd be in if I had even a 20% co pay :icon_e_surprised:.
Get your drugs from a pharmacy that has a Specialty Pharmacy operation within it starting now. The co pay for my chemo therapy drug from a non specialty formula would have been in the thousands of dollars. The MD Anderson pharmacist who called me told me my pharmacy (CVS) has a Specialty Pharmacy branch and that would cut the co pay to less than $100.00 which is, under the circumstances better than a sharp stick in the eye. Well it turned out my co pay was nothing which is a whole hell of a lot better than a sharp stick in the eye.
Stay in shape. Early on I lost a lot of weight and it was mostly muscle mass. Yup, no appetite. Well I got my self a dumb bell set and I use it. I big tumor on my hip and the tumors on my spine had me almost paralised but now thanks to MD Anderson's fabulous Physical Therapy department and some diligent exercise I've gone from barely mobile to being able to walk on my own though with quite a limp. Out of the house for short distances I'll use a cane and If I'm going to be moving more than 50 or 60 yards I still take "wonder walker." I'm phobic about falls and a fall that would shatter my extremely compromised left pelvis is a worse thought than any other possibility.
Be grateful for your friends. People who show up when you're real sick are a pearl beyond price.
This one is real important. Have a positive attitude. I wake up every morning and thank God for waking up and for being about 75% functional with bearable pain. This will make you better company and really does facilitate living your life to the best extent possible. I'm going trap shooting with our daughter on Tuesday, first time I'll have shot a shotgun since being sick. That's another milestone. I have hopes of going duck hunting with her (guided hunt of course) in January if I don't suddenly get sicker or hurt myself.
Realizing you have limited time can actually intensify the pleasure you have in the moment. Never forget that.