We received this great email from AnCan community member Allen, with tips from a patient’s perspective on to best manage your medical team, as inspired by our webinar “Managing Your Medical Team“.
From Allen himself…
First, I live in Auburn, Alabama, which is a smaller college town with a population of about 68,000 residents, including about 30,000 students. Until recently, we only had 1 urologist for the entire county with 175,000 residents. I was diagnosed with PCa a year ago and started looking outside my community for more options.
I landed at Emory University last November, but was disappointed with the level of service and attention to detail. After they made several mistakes this spring, I fired my team at Emory in July and went with a private practice Urologist in Atlanta and Dr. John Sylvester, a prominent Radiation Oncologist in Sarasota, FL.
I am much happier with the team I have now, but I have found it a little challenging managing a team of doctors in 3 different states and various distances from my home. Following are some things I have learned:
1. Referrals are not as important as they used to be. Many doctors will accept new patients without a referral.
2. Choose the Doctor, not the Institution, to get a doctor you are comfortable with.
3. Insurance – make sure the doctor is in your insurance network and ask your insurer if procedures are covered so you are not blindsided.
4. Telehealth calls – ask if the Doctor can do them, especially across state lines.
5. Keep good notes! I found a notebook system has been a great help in organizing my notes, phone calls, and appointments.
6. HIPAA – If you are comfortable with emailing your records and questions, that is your decision. I would rather get my info into the right hands quickly than to worry about a lot of red tape. Doctors may be more restricted by HIPAA rules.
7. Patient Portals – Use them if you can. It is an excellent and secure way to access your health records.
8. List your questions for the Doctor prior to visits to make sure you cover your concerns. Be concise. (and always hand the doc a copy of your questions at the start of your consult – that way everything gets answered: AnCan)
9. Coordinate your Medical Team – Secure office and FAX numbers and other contact info and have that info available to other members of your team if needed. This can save a lot of time and prevent delays.
10. Insist on getting good Diagnostics Tests.
Thanks, Allen! And as we say here at AnCan…Be your OWN best advocate!
On August 31st, we had the utmost pleasure having an all-star line up of wonderful health care members of all different specialties to come together and discuss being part of a team, including how patients and care partners can work together!
On our panel we had Ladybird Morgan, RN, MSW (Mettle Health, executive director and co-founder Humane Prison Hospice Project), Dr. Aaron Boster (Neurologist, MS expert, The Boster Center for Multiple Sclerosis), Dr. Pamela Munster (Oncologist, UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center), and Karen Schanche, LCSW (psychotherapist).
You’ll hear open and honest dialogue, and great answers to questions from our audience.
Watch this amazing webinar here:
Special thanks to Myovant Sciences – Pfizer and Foundation Medicine for sponsoring this webinar.
For information on our peer-led video chat VIRTUAL SUPPORT GROUPS, click here.
To SIGN UP for the Group or any other of our AnCan Virtual Support groups, visit our Contact Us page.
AnCan and The Marsh (well renown, long-established theater company with a large following in the Bay Area and venues in San Francisco and Oakland) collaborateevery 4th Wednesday of the month for Solo Arts Heal!
On July 28th, we had the pleasure of having Michael Bihovsky!
Michael shared his award-winning film and musical theater works, ranging from Les Mis parodies to full musicals about neuroplasticity to his brand new music video, Paperweight, which documents the COVID-19 pandemic experience through the lens of disability. Through this wide range of creations, Michael demonstrated how he has created music and art whose poignancy (and comedy) shines through not merely despite his struggles with the connective tissue disorder Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, but because of those struggles.
Watch this incredible performance here:
To SIGN UP for any of our AnCan Virtual Support group reminders, visit our Contact Us page.
This post is dedicated in loving memory of Lung Cancer Advocate Don Stranathan. May his memory always be a blessing to us all.
Friend of AnCan, and advocate Peggy Denis from The Insightful Breath had some great reflections on milestones as she hit a big cancerversary number, 5 years!
Peggy beautifully puts into words the ebbs and flows of what we experience during our years of having cancer, or a chronic illness:
Five years of saying hello, we are on this path together and goodby, it is an honor to know you – see you on the other side. Five years of devastatingly painful losses and still, five years of encouraging gains. During this five years we’ve maneuvered through a pandemic. Didn’t see that one coming but didn’t see cancer coming either so there’s that. Most importantly, five years of experiencing profound love and five years of living in the moment.