Guest guest Posted April 13, 1999 Report Share Posted April 13, 1999 At 11:37 PM 4/13/99 +0000, you wrote: >So, do I tell my doc or not? Hi Ray, Sounds like a real " Dear Abby " question: To tell or not to tell. Well, I wonder what kinds of experience everyone else has had. I can tell you that there are a lot of cigarette smokers out there who have purchased life insurance at non-smoker rates. After the first year, it's incontestable. Ken Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 1999 Report Share Posted April 14, 1999 Interesting connundrum Ray. When you come back, you come back big time! In my view, I don't think there is a straight answer to your many questions .. From a legal point of view, (which my brother keeps trying to pound into my head), you don't really know anything right now. So, should you tell your insurer ? What's to tell ? Until you have proof positive, there is nothing to tell. If I were to tell my insurer (if I had one) that I thought I had cancer, I would just be cutting myself off unduly. I think it is the same here. From a medical point of view, I think you have a duty to yourself and possibly more so to your family to explore the possibility if you think there are symptoms there. Especially if there is a possibility of a reduced life span, in which case I would probably use the time to finish the many things I started, repair the damage I may have done, make peace with myself and others. As you know I had a possible colon cancer scare over last Christmas and that is what I used the time for. I felt a great sense of relief when the subsequent results came back negative but it did give me an energy and a determination to finish many projects and even get back into some old ones I hadn't done for years (my leatherwork for example). I am now facing another such possibility as my recent barium test came back with some questions which may be related to the previous problem. I now have to go get scoped for a possibility of esophagus cancer. The barium showed something very wrong but as yet undetermined until scoping can be done. Somehow, it doesn't scare me as much as before. Medically, I'm glad my doctor is aware because he can assist me in getting the best treatment possible and this extra knowledge will be helpful in prescribing possibly counteracting medications. The curent results point to a possible cause tied to the amount and the kind of medications I have been on for years. I would want him to have as much information as possible to assist him in his job. You mention that there is no treatment for Sjogrens but couln't some physical or mental behaviour affect the Reiters treatment ? I think the mental or emotional question is already answered by the simple fact that you are asking. How detrimental can that concern get and what impact can/will it have on your relationships with those around you ? From a moral point of view. Can you tell a lie, even a lie by omission. That's something you need to discuss with your conscience. If you are after getting more life insurance, legally there is nothing to tell but if you are 99% sure that there is something to tell, then what ? That can be a tough one or a really easy one but anyway you cut it, the answer rests with you and possibly your faith. Totally off topic, which day in May is your birthday ? Mike maito:byteme@... homepage: http://members.home.net/mcourteau ICQ# is 19431463 -------------------------------------------- To tell or not to tell, that is the question. Ken, I've got a good question for everyone. I have Reiters Syndrome, a spondyloarthropy disease (autoimmune response disease). It now is pretty much a sure thing that I also have secondary Sjogrens Syndrome (autoimmune disorder that attacks the mucus membranes and salivary glands and can attack organs) My mother died of complications from Sjogrens last month. She was 67. I'll be 50 in May. There is no cure and no real treatments for the disease. Just like my Reiters. All you can do is treat the symptoms and I don't need any prescriptions to do most of the things Sjogrens patients have to do to manage their disease. I won't take prednisone/cortisteroid shots or pills for the Reiters unless I need to stop a flare-up. My doc won't give me more than two shots a year if I need them because of the side-effects. Do I tell my internist that I also have Sjogrens? Do I then submit to expensive blood tests and a biopsy that will tell us what we already know? Do I want this added to my medical files? It would be a killer for any life insurance I would ever apply for. For most companies Reiters is not a problem for writing life insurance. But Sjogrens is another story. Malpractice lawyers won't even touch a Sjogrens case. So, do I tell my doc or not? My wife is an MD and we both know the truth in this situation. She thinks I shouldn't tell my internist or any other doctor about the Sjogrens as long as that knowledge doesn't interfere with other treatment or emergencies. What do you guys think? Ray in Virginia ---------------------------------------------------- Reach me by ICQ. My ICQ# is 14278868 or, * Page me online through my Personal Communication Center: http://wwp.mirabilis.com/14278868 (go there and try it!) or, * Send me E-mail Express directly to my computer screen 14278868@... For downloading ICQ at http://www.icq.com/ Ray in Virginia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 1999 Report Share Posted April 15, 1999 Well, I went to ENT doc today and told him about my symptoms. He said that if it smells like a dog, acts like a dog, and sounds like a dog, then it must be a dog. My symptoms are conclusive for a diagnosis of Sjogrens Syndrome as well as Reiters Syndrome with Fibromyalgia thrown in, now, just to round things out a little bit. With chostocondritis, allergies, colitis (which usually accompanies Reiters), migraine headaches, perforated & bleeding septum (another Reiters partner), etc., my Alphabet Soup mix of diseases is getting longer every year. I suppose having an auto-immune reactive disease is like playing with dominoes: once one falls the others do, too. I'm not in the best mood today. I really wanted the doc to tell me that I didn't have Sjogrens Syndrome, but he didn't fulfill my wish. Yes, Ken, I am being a little bit morbid about the diagnoses, even though I already knew the truth. Sometimes having worked in the medical field transcribing doctors orders while in seminary, as well as being married to a doctor with all the available medical resources at hand, is not always an advantage. I think I'd rather have not been so knowledgeable about these kinds of disorders. My real mistake is probably knowing this for two years and not telling anyone, because my mother was in the terminal stages of a pulmonary condition caused by her Sjogrens. Didn't want to add to her anxiety and worry. So, now I'm not only suffering through the grief of losing a loving parent, I'm also having to suffer through telling my family that I have the same disease that my Mother had. Oh, well, as long as the old ticker keeps ticking, I'll be around to harangue you guys with my unique ways. Hope springs eternal! Ray in Virginia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 1999 Report Share Posted April 15, 1999 In a message dated 4/15/99 12:07:57 PM Eastern Daylight Time, hrn@... writes: > Didn't want to add to her anxiety and worry. So, now I'm not only suffering through the grief of losing a loving parent, I'm also having to suffer through telling my family that I have the same disease that my Mother had. Dear Ray, I am so saddened at the terrible trial you are going through. There are no words that can bring you peace in this except that I know that God loves you and will always be with you, if you ask Him in Jesus. I understand, to a certain degree, the suffering you are enduring. My mother does not know of all I have to suffer through either. The comfort I might receive from her is not there because she is unaware of what I am going through. However, her age and personal frailty has prevented me from letting her know fully. When my father died, I was just in my mid thirties. I had to put aside my personal grief for the benefit of my mother's grief. Such suffering just does not seem to totally heal. May His love for you, comfort you and bring you peace. Love, Madeline Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 1999 Report Share Posted April 15, 1999 In a message dated 4/15/99 6:58:58 PM Eastern Daylight Time, kturbin@... writes: > Only thing I can think of is that as you grow older, hopefully you will not remember all these problems, and therefor be able to feel better! Ken, I just answered your previous email about this very condition....guess we will all be praying for either galloping senility or Alzheimer's. Mad Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 1999 Report Share Posted April 15, 1999 At 12:08 PM 4/15/99 +0000, you wrote: >. Hope springs eternal! Ray, Seems like new diagnoses spring eternal too. This is seriously challenging my ability for one liners. Only thing I can think of is that as you grow older, hopefully you will not remember all these problems, and therefor be able to feel better! Ken Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 1999 Report Share Posted April 17, 1999 I think we all do the same thing. When I first found out that I had heart problems I did not tell my mother as it had been a few years that my father had died from a major heart attack. She moved to another part of the country so she still does not know. I know if she did she would be worried all the time and at age 78 she does not need that extra worry. Bill Newman -- Rochester, NY wtnewman@... Bill@... www.christianmerchants.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 1999 Report Share Posted April 18, 1999 Bill, Thanks for your post. It's really hard to tell the ones you love that you have the same problem that another loved one died from. They get all morbid and start planning your funeral. LOL Personally I plan to be around for another 50 plus years. Ray in Virginia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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