The
realization hit Natalie like a ton of bricks. Her
mother, Joann, had literally died of embarrassment!
Joann had noticed blood in her stool almost a year
before she was diagnosed with colon cancer. At first
she told herself it must have been those beets she
ate. Then she thought it was most likely her hemorrhoids,
although she had not had a flair-up of hemorrhoids
since Natalie’s birth 52 years earlier. |
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The
truth was that Joann was embarrassed to talk with her doctor
about private topics such as her bowel habits. She didn’t
raise the concern with her doctor until she had bloating,
cramping and abdominal pain. This led to the diagnosis of
colon cancer that ultimately took her life. Natalie’s
brother-in-law, who was a nurse, wondered whether Joann
would still be alive if she had told her doctor about the
blood in her stool when she first noticed it.
Let’s face it; certain topics are embarrassing to
talk about with your doctor. I
call them the 5 P’s:
• Peeing
• Pooping
• Paying
• Procreating
• Psychic moaning
Although
at first blush the challenge of talking with your doctor
about
embarrassing medical topics seems simple enough, for some
people, it can cause
significant suffering.
Hillary, for example, had what’s now called a shy
bladder. She had not used a
public restroom in over 20 years. She was too embarrassed
to talk with her doctor
about this; instead, she remained a prisoner to her bladder.
Ed was laid off from work and could no longer afford his
asthma medications.
Instead of talking with his doctor about it, he decided
to do without He wound
up in the emergency room with an asthma attack that could
have been avoided with
regular medication.
Tom had some sexual side effects from his blood pressure
medicine. Instead of
talking with his doctor and getting a different medicine,
he just stopped taking
it. The doctors wonder if this might have contributed to
his heart attack.
Jerry noticed his loss of appetite and sleeping problems
as his caregiver
responsibilities for his aging father mounted. He wondered
if he might be
depressed, but dismissed the thought because real men don’t
get depressed.
Imagine how each of these stories might have been different
if these individuals
who suffered in silence could have talked with their doctors.
Here are 6 tips that can help you talk with your doctor
about embarrassing medical
topics:
1. Own the embarrassment.
Say to your doctor, “This is a taboo topic in our
family, so it’s hard for me to
ask. Is it normal to have a funny smell coming from your
belly button?”
2. Find the words.
Your doctor speaks a specialized language acquired through
years of training.
Sometimes patients are embarrassed because they don’t
know the “right words” or
have a hard time describing the problem.
Remember that your job is to communicate. You don’t
need to know the fancy words
to do that. If a patient said to me, “Dad had an operation
on the dingle-ball
thing at the back of his throat”, I would know just
what he meant. And, the
patient would seem relieved when I said, “Oh, you
mean the uvula.”
The best way to make sure you and your doctor understand
each other is to use
anatomically correct words. Get a basic anatomy atlas. Use
anatomically
correct words with your children.
3. Practice saying the words.
Sometimes embarrassing words can be hard to get out of your
mouth. Gertrude, a 90-year-old patient said to me, “You
youngsters don’t understand how much things have changed.
When I got breast cancer in the 1962, the words ‘breast’
and ‘cancer’ were not uttered in polite company.”
Some words are still embarrassing to say. Practice saying
these words out loud when you’re alone! That will
make it easier to say them at the doctor’s office.
4. Find the right person to ask.
You may have an easy rapport with the nurse or physician’s
assistant at your
doctor’s office. You can bring up the sensitive topic
with them. Say, “Trish,
could you please give the doctor a heads up. I want to know
why I should say no
to those steroids my buddies at the gym are offering me.
I would love to look
like they do.”
5. Find the right way to ask.
Maybe it’s easier for you to drop a note or a cartoon
to your doctor rather than
ask in person. Find the style that works best for you.
6. Remember that your doctor is there to help you,
not to judge you.
Your doctor has heard it all before. I promise! Your doctor
will not think less of you for asking an embarrassing medical
question; in fact, your doctor with think more of you for
overcoming your fear and helping you take charge of your
health.
About
The Author
Dr.
Vicki is a board-certified surgeon and Clinical Instructor
at the University of Washington School of Medicine who left
the operating room to help caregivers and patients take
the most direct path from illness to optimal health. Want
more tips about caregiving? Get your free report “Caring
for the Caregiver” by emailing Dr. Vicki Rackner today
at DrVicki@DrVicki.org
and be sure to check out her regular column with the Johnson
& Johnson Consumer Products Group’s new caregiver
web site http://www.strengthforcaring.com/
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