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Reflections in a Head Mirror

Reflections - Archive

9/21/2012

Too Much Fun

Not everything that is faced can be changed. But nothing can be changed until it is faced.
- James Baldwin


She sits in the examination chair reeking of cigarette smoke. “I had a new sore under my tongue last week,” she tells me. “It was bad.”    

A year ago, she finally developed a large throat cancer from her years of smoking and drinking. The cancer had spread to the neck lymph nodes and had grown large and hard. The outlook had not been good.    

Yet, things went surprisingly well. Her family's wonderful support had helped her make it through the chemotherapy and seven weeks of radiation. Though it was not easy for her, the cancer responded nicely and the throat and neck look fine now. A scan confirmed the good news.    

So, when she developed a new sore on the tongue, everyone was worried. Her daughter brought her in to see the primary doctor who started her on antibiotics. Within a few days, the tongue was better. Now she is in my office.    

“You must have bumped it. Maybe you bit the tongue, I can’t tell. In any case, things look fine now. No cancer.”    

She smiles. “I do feel better, Doctor.”    

“Let’s talk about your smoking, though.” She frowns. She has had this discussion with her family, her friends, and her care providers many, many times. “If you continue to smoke, your risk of another cancer goes way up,” I tell her. “How can we help you quit?”    

“Mom, listen to what the doctor is saying.”    

“I already know all that,” she replies. “I just enjoy smoking too much! I don't want to quit.”  


As a society, we have made great strides helping people quit and preventing a new generation from starting. Smoking peaked in the mid-1960s when about 42 percent of adults smoked. Now, it’s less than 20 percent. In the mid-1990s, about 36 percent of 12th graders smoked at least once per month. Now, it’s 19 percent. That’s good news. 

Things are not perfect, though. We have not helped our most vulnerable. Half of cigarettes smoked in the United States are consumed by people with substance abuse or psychiatric disorders. The poor are more likely to smoke and have greater difficulty quitting. A recent study of smokers earning less than $30,000 per year in New York (the state with the highest cigarette excise taxes) found that they spend up to 23.6 percent of their total income on cigarettes, double what they spent in 2003. Unfortunately, very little of the revenue generated from cigarettes sales is designated to fund tobacco prevention and cessation programs.    


My patient fits into all of the high-risk categories and I doubt she will quit until she is too ill to physically smoke or when she can simply not afford to buy cigarettes.

So, we will talk about her smoking again. And again. And again.      

___
Ref: Farrelly MC et al., The Consequences of High Cigarette Excise Taxes for Low-Income Smokers (2012), PLoS ONE 7(9): e10.1371/journal.pone.0043838      

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Could a greater miracle take place than for us to look through each other’s eyes for an instant?
-Henry David Thoreau    

It is almost 7:00 a.m. and I carry my briefcase and lunch bag from the car to my office. I nod to some of the night shift employees heading home. Another day has begun.  

I type my password and check the computer, reminding myself of the twenty patients I am scheduled to see today in the cancer clinic. A few new consults with untreated or recurrent cancers occupy the longer appointment slots. Follow-up and post-operative patients will be seen more quickly. It will be a full day but, hopefully, I will grab a few minutes around noon to eat my sandwich.  

I print out some office notes and carry them with me to our weekly 7:15 a.m. Tumor Conference. Several physicians present cases for discussion. We review the scans and the pathology, making recommendations for treatment. We determine who is eligible for a clinical trial. We look at recent research results. Usually, a brief discussion will mean better news for the patient; we have something to offer. A longer discussion can reflect the lack of good options.  

Clinic gets going. First is a 64-year-old man with a tongue cancer. Symptoms have been present for about six months. The scans are helpful. The cancer has not caused much damage. Only one lymph node is involved. Everything else looks fine. I run through the surgical risks, benefits, and alternatives. I prepare the consent form and look at the schedule. Any questions?  

He drops his head, hands gripping his knees. “My wife would have known what to ask,” he tells me. “She died six weeks ago. That’s why I waited to come in. I was caring for her.”  

I pause. There is a story pressing in on us from all sides. It floods the room.  

“I am so sorry,” I reply. “I am glad you are here. Your cancer is still very curable. Tell me about her.”  

We spend some time. I am soon behind on my schedule. There will be more stories that need to be shared before the day is through.  

A recent You-Tube video from the Cleveland Clinic is a spot-on rendering of what happens every day in a hospital. See what you think. No matter where we are, stories surround us, but they are closest to the surface when we are most vulnerable. Recognizing this reality should be part of the repertoire of every physician. We teach this to our students and residents. Even still, how easily we all forget.  

The day in clinic draws to an end and everyone has gone home. At 6:00 p.m., my charts are half-complete. I pick up my briefcase and lunch bag. I find my car and head home.

Tomorrow will be here soon enough.

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The following is feedback received for this blog:


   Dr Campbell, Your Reflections are always so moving including this one. The You-Tube Video from the Cleveland Clinic was excellent.

- Mary Ann, an RN
 
 
 
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Bruce Campbell, MD, grew up in the Chicago area, graduating from Purdue University and Rush Medical College. He completed an otolaryngology residency at the Medical College of Wisconsin and a head and neck surgery fellowship at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. He has been on the faculty at Froedtert & the Medical College of Wisconsin since 1987.

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Dr. Bruce Campbell
Bruce Campbell, MD
Medical College of Wisconsin Otolaryngologist
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