A man I had not met came to my office prepared for one of life’s most joyful pursuits – a screening colonoscopy. Perhaps, this experience gives truth to the adage, ‘it’s better to give than receive’. This man was 70-years-old and was about to undergo his first screening study of the colon, an exam that experts and others advise take place at age 50. Let me do the math for you; he was 20 years too late. I performed my task with diligence and removed a large polyp. While I believe that the lesion was still benign, we gastroenterologists prefer to discover your polyps when they are small. Smaller lesions are nearly always benign and are safer to remove. Afterwards, I chatted with the patient and his wife and I expressed some surprise that there had been a two decade delay of his colonoscopy. (Readers would be amazed and amused at the creative excuses I’ve been offered over the years explaining delayed colonoscopi...
MD Whistleblower presents vignettes and commentaries on the medical profession. We peek 'behind the medical curtain' and deliver candor and controversy in every post.