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I think you did the right thing, though sometimes there is a price to be paid for doing so. Two years ago, my wife's aunt (89 years old at the time) was diagnosed with breast cancer. We found out from my mother-in-law and called the aunt that night. She told us that her physician had already made arrangements for a radical mastectomy a week hence. I wondered aloud at the proposed treatment, and started asking questions about the nature of any pre-op work-up. Her aunt knew nothing about any proposed work-up. We suggested to her that she find out from her physician and call us back the next day. We found out that the plan was simply to do the radical andbe done with it. Dismayed, I suggested to her that she ask her physician about at least getting a bone scan prior to the surgery, to evaluate her for metastatic disease. The physician balked at this and demanded to know who had made the suggestion. When he found out who had made the suggestion he made some comments to her about uninformed non-professionals meddling in things they knownothing about and dismissed our suggestions. Needless to say, I exploded when she told us about this. We then contacted one of my wife's cousins, a pediatrician in Minnesota, who asked the same questions and made the same suggestions. Finally, after much acrid discussion between us and the physician, the aunt had a bone scan, which showed no metastatic disease. Based on that information, the treatment was changed to a simple lumpectomy with short-term radiation therapy follow-up. She is alive and well today, having just celebrated her 91st birthday. Had we not intervened, she would have just gone along with whatever her physician told her. It pays to get informed. Finally, just so someone doesn't flame me for being meddlesome, I have a 25 years history in health care, most of it working clinically with cancer patients (Nuclear Medicine).
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