Guest guest Posted February 11, 2006 Report Share Posted February 11, 2006 I have read the posts and cannot see any problem or what you are taking umbrage with. No one (including Tracey)attacked anyone personally and differences of opinions are just that, different opinions. We are all dealing with a life ending disease, so the stakes for being correct are the highest one can have in the human, non- spiritual realm. There is no doubt in my mind that this group has saved lives through the dissemination of information and personal experiences with good and bad docs. When your life is on the line, it is wise to get a second opinion and question the experience of any doctor, especially if the disease is obscure such as CML. Here is a true example that may help. When I was diagnosed with prostate cancer(far from an obscure form of cancer), I talked to Dr Druker, my doctor. He conferenced with his urology docs at OHSU and gave me THEIR opinion, not his, as he was not as well versed in urology. Further, he referred me to a friend and colleague of his, Dr Trump, at Roswell Park Cancer Center in Buffalo. Dr Trump is head of research in the Urology Department and he brought in his head of Urology, Dr Mohler, who is also head of surgery. All of these men are great men and they all wanted to work together to arrive at the best solution for me. As it turns out, the best for me is a robotic laproscopic radical prostetectomy, with pieces of my prostate being used at both OHSU for research (by Dr Druker)and Roswell by both Dr. Trump and the leukemia department. The above long-winded exegesis is an attempt to show that doctors, even research specialits, who are the best in the world, do not know everything about all things and that great doctors seek other great doctors for second opinions and help with problems all the time, as they should. Finally, I fired my first oncologist right on the spot, as she was a complete boob, knowing nothing about Gleevec, knowing nothing of sedation for BMBs (not feeling it necessary- of course, she never had one- I asked!) and being a tranplant flag waver. My second doc, , is the complete opposite. Knew about Gleevec and went to bat for me with the insurance companies, as it was not approved for first line treatment when I started it. Also had a BMB done on himself in medical school to see what he would be putting his patients through. Also is delighted that I see Dr. Druker and is happy to get all of his input, as it makes him a better doctor. I remember when s Hopkins was poo pooing Gleevec and insisting on transplants as the only way to go. If a great institution like that is slow on the uptake in a numereically small disease such as CML, it logically follows that there are going to be doctors who are the same. In closing, PT Barnum said it best: Caveat Emptor! Let the buyer beware. Fred Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 12, 2006 Report Share Posted February 12, 2006 To post, Im tired of tit for tat. Ive not outright attacked anyone, just added to someone elses post/comment. And because I seemed to be agreeing with someone, it meant that I was disagreeing with someone else but in my eyes I just had a different outlook. Im sorry for any confusion or offence. Susie Leech Dx Nov 2002 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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