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Not just cancer. Afib patients who have eaten well, exercised like crazy, have no co-morbidities/no Htn, yet still their fault.
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Can we clone you please? Or at least when are you leading ASCO? Seriously on the latter...I find myself agreeing with so much of what you say, you’ve got a lot of wisdom and insight into the patient experience.
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It’s like blaming the Pt make a provider feel like he or she is immune to the same fate, a completely false sense of security.
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Can I borrow your clip? I’m taking it to FB...
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All yours!
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I truly think we should say “protection” not “prevention” in the cancer field. Wellness is like wearing a seatbelt - it sure can help you but it can’t prevent a crash. Establishing proper verbiage designed for patients to understand is key.
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Words matter. Cc:
@MVanMeterMD and extrapolations from the Women’s Health Initiative to the breast cancer community#bcsm - Show replies
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I saw a poster about the patient failing WBR. Um, no. The SBRT failed the patient.
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You’re absolutely right, how we speak and the words we use matter. It’s hard to never slip up and say something in a way we don’t intend, but we all need to consciously work harder at this. It’s SO important.
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