Follow up colonoscopies
Greg
Comments
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Greg -
You nailed it. Such is the sad state of medicine in this country where the foxes guard the hen house. The insurance companies are dictating medical practice. Just speaks to the need to completely overhaul our nationalmedical and insurance systems. (like that will ever happen).0 -
Having just picked up my prep for monday I'm thinking perhaps every ten years or so would be a neat figure, gets so the the high point of my life is a yearly clean out. What's the bet when they finally roll me out for an autopsy they will use a flexible camera. SSSIIIGGGGHHHHH.spongebob said:Greg -
You nailed it. Such is the sad state of medicine in this country where the foxes guard the hen house. The insurance companies are dictating medical practice. Just speaks to the need to completely overhaul our nationalmedical and insurance systems. (like that will ever happen).0 -
It should depend upon the person's history. Obviously with our cancer survivor group it should be more frequent and if you check with someone else you may be able to get it more frequently. In a person with no history of colon cancer and no findings of abnormal polyps on previous colonoscopies then often 7 years is the recommended time. It seems that after the initial diagnosis a yearly scope would be in order and then if nothing found after about 3 of those it could be spread out longer.
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Hi, your message is a bit concerning:( Is your gastro doc an oncologist? If not, why not ask your oncologist for some input? You might also try to tap the American Cancer Society or another Cancer Institute for some info regarding follow-up protcol. Keep us up on what you find and take of yourself....sometimes we need to advocate for ourselves...wish it weren't so...you have enough to think about.0
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Thats amazing! I guess the insurance company would rather pay for chemo and surgeries then preventative care. It would only make sense that the colonoscopy would be less expensive in the long run than the patient with cancer.
Even if you have to pay out of your own pocket please have one.
My dad's first colon caner diagnosis was in 1993 (resection + chemo) then cancer back again in 1996 (another resection + chemo) then went for check ups every 6 months till about 2003 then it kind of got forgotten ...then 2005... BOOM full blown colon cancer mets in liver covering too much of the liver to even do surgery....if only he had continued to go for his yearly check-ups it may have been caught at an earlier phase and surgery may have been possible. Don't wait...0 -
But don't you folks think we should consider just how much extra safety yearly colonoscopies would give? They are pretty expensive. My doctor threw out a couple of figures (I hope I remember right): with a colonoscopy every 3 years, it's 1 in 10,000 a large cancer is missed, but with yearly colonoscopies, it's 1 in 6,000,000. A considerable difference, it's true, but the thing is, 1 in 10,000 is already quite good.0
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