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Susan Estrich
25 May 2012
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23 May 2012
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Heroes

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For two days, I have been sitting with men and women in skimpy gowns — and even skimpy shorts — many of them literally afraid for their lives. There we were, our breasts crammed into mammogram machines one day, drinking barium the next, hoping to rule out this and that and walk out with one of those get-out-of-jail cards that means you're free for another year, or that there is no blockage, or that the scan didn't show anything "unusual."

Some of the people there, lucky ones like me, didn't know exactly what to expect or how long things would take. Some, less fortunate, had been there many times. The staff, of course, does this every day. This terrifying place is where they work.

My sister had cancer more than 25 years ago. "How do you do it?" I've asked her more than once. How do you deal with all the tests and biopsies and false alarms and, in one case just a few years ago, real alarms? How do you sit reading a book while someone is reading life-or-death scans? You just do. What is, is. What will be will be.

I am not so serene.

I can deal with pain, no problem. Discomfort, A-OK. This is going to taste pretty terrible, the kind technician said to me yesterday. I laughed. A bad taste in my mouth is not something to complain about. Six hours back and forth to the X-ray machine is a piece of cake. But every time a doctor, nurse or technician looked at one of the scans, I was on their shoulder, looking too, as if I even knew what to look for.

Pain is not my problem; fear is. And it isn't even fear for myself, or at least not so much. I sit in those little rooms, dressed in a scanty gown and making small talk with the others, thinking of my children and how they still need a mother.

I used to go to chemotherapy with one of my friends. I would sit in the big room and tell stories, make jokes, kid the nurses. I was very popular in the chemo room. One day, a woman was wheeled in by her husband, with her mother carrying her new baby. They had waited until the baby was born to start chemo. The new mother was clearly very ill. Even I, the jokester, could find nothing to joke about that day. A baby needs her mother.

Yesterday was better. Yesterday I tried to comfort the young man sitting in the skimpy shorts waiting for the scan of his brain.

You'll be fine, I told him, as if I had any idea of it. Something very similar happened to me, I said, as if either of us was in a position to judge what was similar and what wasn't. Don't worry, an older woman said to me the day before, as we sat in our skimpy little tops wrapped in blankets against the cold. I had breast cancer 15 years ago, and here I am.

Rosie, my nanny/housekeeper/closest friend of the past 25 years, had lung cancer two years ago. Every time she turns around, they seem to order another scan. Today, she had the contrast scan of her kidneys and pelvis. Cancer, her doctor told her, often comes back in different places. I worried all day for her. How was it, I asked when she came over this afternoon. How was what, she said. What is, is. She'll get the results next week. Please, God.

I know there are technicians and doctors who are cold and impersonal. I know that even the most caring have bad days. But in two days, one after another, I met men and women who treated each of us with kindness, who touched my arm when I needed reassurance, brought me extra blankets, made sure I knew what was going on. I met men and women, both those wearing the uniforms and those in gowns, who were accepting life's challenges and disappointments, dealing with discomfort and fear, with the kind of grace and kindness that you don't find in so many places today.

Our health care system is under assault on almost every front — too expensive, too wasteful, too many tests, not enough tests, too much interference by insurance companies, too many long waits. Most of the doctors I know have children who want to be anything but. They've seen too much. I don't blame them. But there is something about being in a place where lives are on the line, something so intense and human and vital, that puts everything else in perspective. It can bring out the worst in people, but in my experience, at least, it more often brings out the best.

There are all kinds of heroes in the world: the men and women risking their lives in Japan, our soldiers fighting in Afghanistan, the police officers and fire fighters who put their lives on the line every day they go to work. But after two days of tests (so far, so good, knock on wood and keep the evil eye away), my heroes are the people like my sister and Rosie, who look death in the eye and don't blink, and the men and women who not only run the machines and read the tests, but bring the blankets and — even more importantly — affirm the dignity of those in skimpy robes and skimpy shorts.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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Comments

8 Comments | Post Comment


And after Obamacare kicks in, many of the people in that room will be doomed as Obama's death panels will deem them not worthy of the cost of treatment.


Comment: #1
Posted by: SusansMirror
Fri Mar 18, 2011 12:01 PM
SusansMirror
You should be ashame of yourself for spreading a blatant lie.
There are no Death Panels as you so inaccurately call them.
End of Life Planning is essentially the same as a "Living Will" with the opportunity for you to talk with your doctor about what measures you would want to be taken and what measures not to be taken.
As a cancer patient myself I fully appreciate that opportunity.
Having watched my own fathers horrible death I only wish someone had done this with my mother and father.
And to Susan Estrich....you should write a response on just this topic and set it straight once more. Don't let the lies stand. Take a clue from Anderson Cooper's recent reporting.
Comment: #2
Posted by: CycleGuy
Fri Mar 18, 2011 1:03 PM
SusansMirror
You should be ashame of yourself for spreading a blatant lie.
There are no Death Panels as you so inaccurately call them.
End of Life Planning is essentially the same as a "Living Will" with the opportunity for you to talk with your doctor about what measures you would want to be taken and what measures not to be taken.
As a cancer patient myself I fully appreciate that opportunity.
Having watched my own fathers horrible death I only wish someone had done this with my mother and father.
And to Susan Estrich....you should write a response on just this topic and set it straight once more. Don't let the lies stand. Take a clue from Anderson Cooper's recent reporting.
Comment: #3
Posted by: CycleGuy
Fri Mar 18, 2011 1:03 PM
Sorry, CycleGuy, but ObamaCare creates commissions that will decide who gets what care, based on their age and other criteria. You're too old? Too bad. That's a death panel. Just cuz you kool-aid drinkers don't want to admit the horrible flaws in Obamacare, doesn't make your assertions correct. As Nancy Pelosi said, you had to pass the bill to know what's in it. CycleGuy, unlike the congressmen who voted for it without reading it, you have a chance to read it. Even Paul Krugman claims accurately that the cost/benefit board established over private medicine by Obamacare will be able to impose “more or less binding judgments” refusing care, and moreover, that these refusals will save “a lot of money” in the context of treating the elderly (and others, such as people with disabilities and terminal illnesses). He says that the panel will prevent treatment that isn't “medically” useful. And rationing organ transplants is another form of a death panel.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Lesley Barnard
Sat Mar 19, 2011 12:43 PM
Cycleguy - as the husband of a breast cancer survivor I'm disgusted at your comment. Every day my wife reads reports on the breast cancer boards she subscribes to about the refusal by various governments to provide cancer treatments that are available here in the US through their own national health care services.
Why? Because the various governing boards have decreed that the treatments are too expensive in light of the "outcomes" they have observed or expect. If this isn't a Death Panel I don't know what is.
Simple fact - under Obamacare there are many unknowns, but there are at least two certainties: children will suffer and people will die.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Winston Galt
Sun Mar 20, 2011 11:59 AM
Why change a good thing? Our current system is the best in the world. We can improve it and make it better, just let's not destroy it.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Early
Mon Mar 21, 2011 5:52 AM
They just can't let go of the 'death panel' lie. It's one of the few scare tactics they have to make people cut their own throats. You've already got the only 'death panel' you'll ever have. It's called the approval process for your HMO/Health Insurance company.
I was taught about the 'big lie' technique in school (yeah, i'm old..) to see it working in my beloved USA is breaking my heart.
Comment: #7
Posted by: GeorgeC
Mon Mar 21, 2011 3:11 PM
I wish some of you folks would resist the knee jerk Obama bashing!
There are no "death panels" in the new Health Care Law. There have ALWAYS been decisions made by insurers and panels that govern Medicare/Medicaid, and that will not change. Sadly, longshot experimental treatments will never be approved by these folks, unless they are part of clinical trials. Winston, you KNOW this. So why blame Obama when the new law doesn't even fully go into effect for three more years? And while we're on the subject, REPUBLICAN Governor Jan Brewer of Arizona has already cut off funds for people waiting for transplants and some have died. Why don't you call her the "Grim Reaper"? Let's see a little more critical thinking, please.
Comment: #8
Posted by: cadbury
Tue Mar 22, 2011 10:47 AM
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