I went in for a physical the other day. Now, I was sick at that time — not real sick, not COVID, probably RSV since that was going around, and since also the transmission timeline tracks. I was in the middle of it and honestly, still have a really irritating cough (though, be advised, nothing serious, just annoying). I went in with a mask on.
Nobody at the doctor’s office was wearing a mask. Lady at the front desk: “Oh, you don’t have to wear that!” That said, while pointing at my mask. I say, I’ve got a cold, she lets it go. I then fill out the paperwork that talks about my current situation: what meds I’m taking, have I been in surgery, etc.
Then, the nurse lady comes and gets me. First thing she says, pointing at my mask: “You don’t need to wear that in here.” She says it like it’s a favor to me, like, oh, honey, we’re not going to be mean and make you wear that big ol’ horrible ugly mask around your beautiful breathing hole and your luxurious food-catcher of a beard, why don’t you just pop that thing off and suck in a lungful of America.
You don’t need to wear that in here?
Well, I fucking do, SANDRA, because as it turns out, the doctor’s office is where the sick people go. It’s like going to the pharmacy. You mask anywhere, do it in the pharmacy. Everybody in there is horking up lung beef. The respiratory illness is so thick in the air you can catch it on your tongue like snowflakes. I go there, or the doctor’s office, sick people are going to be present. That’s the deal, obviously, wtf. I don’t want what they have, and nobody present should want what I have, what the fuck.
I say, again, I’m sick. I’ll keep the mask on, thanks.
Then she measures me and all that shit, and says, somewhat aggressively, “You are not 5’8″.”
“What?”
“You have it down that you’re five feet eight inches.”
“Okay.”
“You’re only five feet seven and three-quarters.”
“…okay. S… sorry?”
It was such a weird ding, I still don’t know what to make of it? Like, “Hah, gotcha, you were pretending to be a NORMAL HUMAN with a NORMAL HUMAN HEIGHT, but I have discovered a GNOME AMONGST US.”
So then Nurse Sandra, not her name, asks what medications I’m taking and if I’ve had surgery and all those same health questions, making me think that I filled that shit out in the waiting room and then they immediately took the form and threw it in the trash. “Fuck this piece of paper,” they say, with vigor and spite. Fine. Whatever. Then we go throughs some new questions, the fun ones about, “So, who in your family is dead now, and what did they die from?” And that’s a fun little litany to recite.
Nurse takes my blood pressure. It’s high. Not like, blood is about to squirt out of my eyes high, but like mid-high, and that’s odd, because my blood pressure is never high. So, that’s noted.
She leaves. Doctor comes in.
Now, my doctor has the bedside manner of a lamp. Some may find this comforting but you can’t joke with him, you’ll learn nothing about him, he knows nothing about you — he is simply present, like if one of those grocery store robots were a doctor.
Oh, also, you also get like, one question. If you go in for WEIRD ELBOW, you talk to him about WEIRD ELBOW and you get the fuck out. Do not ask him about the ODD EAR GURGLE. He does not want to talk about that. You’re signed up for a WEIRD ELBOW session. You got EAR GURGLE, that’s a different appointment, and this train is a-rollin’, pal.
So, he sits down.
And he says
wait for it
wait for it
waaaaaaait for it
“You don’t have to wear that.”
That, meaning, presumably, my mask.
(Better that than, say, my pants. “You don’t have to wear those dungarees,” he says, a coy twinkle in his once-dead eyes.)
I sigh, and explain, well, there’s a lot of sickness going around, and also, I am presently sick.
When I say this, he visibly flinches and asks, with serious panic:
“Do you have COVID?”
And I need you to understand here that in that exact moment I proved undeniably that I have a superpower, and that superpower is unshakeable willpower. Because I really, really wanted to take my mask off and then answer, confidently, “Oh, yeah, it’s COVID.” Just before coughing.
I did not do this, thus confirming I am a good person.
But I mean, what the fuck, they don’t ask before I get there if I had COVID. They don’t supply tests. They just gleefully tell me to take off my mask. I absolutely could’ve had COVID. And given how glibly the entire office treated the situation, I’d think they actually don’t care very much about COVID — or any other illness! — at all.
(Which is why I mask there!)
So, he then asks, and once again, please wait for it, wait for it —
“What medications are you taking?” And then, you know, have I had surgery, who in my family is alive and how did the dead ones die.
At this point I’m fairly convinced that I’m being punked, like this is some kind of joke, right? They all tell me, ha ha, no masks, also, please give us the same information you just gave to the last three people. Is anybody writing this down? Two of the people seem to be tapping it into a fucking iPad, but at this point I’m pretty sure they’re just playing Wordle. There is literally no continuity of information. I sigh, and I tell him the information AGAIN.
So, he says, “You’re still on the lansoprazole.”
Meaning, my heartburn meds. Proton pump inhibitors.
OTC, yes, yep, I take it every day.
Last year, he asked me this question, and I said yes, and he said, “OTC? I’ll give you a prescription for the prescription dose,” which is twice as powerful, I guess, but I said I didn’t need it, and he gave me the prescription anyway. I asked him then, “Well, I hear there are some risks with the PPIs, so I dunno if I should get a bigger dose when arguably I should wean off this one maybe?” And he said those studies aren’t really great, don’t worry, get the prescription, you dolt. So me, the dolt, said fine. (I did get the prescription. I did not take any. I still have the bottle.)
This year, he says, “You should probably try to get off that.”
That, meaning, the thing he wanted me to be on last year at a higher dose.
He says to just take a lesser heartburn med, I say those work but not like the PPIs work, and we’ve had this conversation before, and he’s like, “Well maybe we oughta get you scoped to see what’s going on.” I also explain last year he didn’t seem that concerned and wanted me on a higher dose.
The doc shrugs that off. Like, so what.
Okayyyy. I’m not opposed to changed thinking. Changed thinking is good! But this isn’t presented as changed thinking, it’s just, wild spasms from one direction to the next.
Then: time to address blood pressure. It’s high. I don’t know why it’s high. It’s been low all my life, except when I’m sick. And, during this appointment (and even now, a little), I’m sick, so maybe that? Also… I had COVID over the summer. And COVID seems to be consistent with a risk of triggering a rise in blood pressure after the fact. Doctor waves this off. Says it’s because I’m basically a fat piece of shit. Not his words, precisely, but he said blah blah blah, high BMI, blah blah blah, I could stand to lose 50 (!) lbs. Which, I mean, feels like a big suggestion? “Hey, you should lose 22% of yourself.” I have not been that thin since *checks notes* high school.
“We need to whittle you down to your teenage weight” does not seem like a healthy, or even doable, suggestion.
And then he’s on about cholesterol. “Your cholesterol is high.” I haven’t even tested this year, but it was high last year, and it has been my entire life. Not one test has ever come back without it. It’s familiar. I dunno. We’re Eastern European. Pork fat is in our blood, literally. My grandmother had it, but okay, she cooked everything in lard. My mother had it, but she was thin as a bird and ate very little. Father, yep, sister, yep, cholesterol. We’re just made of the shit. We’re like animated wax figures, except, fatty blood goop. And to be clear, not one of these people ever had a cardiac event. Cancer was what killed them, not cholesterol. But he’s like, “Well, it’s bad and you need to be on a statin.” I tell him everybody I know who went on one did pretty poorly, from mood changes to muscle pains to headaches to diabetes to depression/fatigue — obviously, this is artisanal data (aka anecdotes), but if you Google statins and side effects, holy crap, it’s a lot. A lot of people with a lot of problems. And he’s like, nah that’s fine, it’s rare, you need to be on a statin. It’s familial, I need to be taking the pills. I don’t want to be taking the pills, but no other alternative is on the table, from his view. Okayyyyy.
“You need to get a colonoscopy,” he says.
I tell him, yeah, I know, I’m scheduled for one in a few weeks. “Because you have to get one at this age,” he insists, and here is another dose of irony, because at age 45, 46, and 47, I told him, “They changed the guidelines, I can get a colonoscopy now,” and he said, “no they didn’t, not until 50, sorry,” every fucking time. Now, now he’s like, “WELL YOU BETTER DO IT, WHAT HAVE YOU BEEN WAITING FOR.”
The appointment is over, then, and I say, with great reluctance, “I think you have to check my prostate.” Which means, y’know, the ol’ wiggly finger test. One of our least most dignified tests during a physical, for either of us. Last year he did it. This year he said, “You’re not at risk until 50.”
And I’m like, motherfucker, you JUST ASKED ME five minutes ago about all the deaths in my family, and I said, as I have said every time, my FATHER died from *does jazz hands* PROSTATE CANCER. Which is why I get the prostate checked. It’s not because I enjoy the experience! It isn’t a treat for me! There’s no romance! No Lindt truffle gently pressed into my mouth! It’s unpleasant for both of us. (Though I note, no joke, I had a doctor many years ago compliment me during the process saying, and I quote, my sphincter had “good snap.” As if it were a bratwurst he was biting into instead of a butthole his finger was plundering. I guess he meant my nether-ring returned to form easily, like a rubber-band? Better that than a blown-out pair of elastic underpants, one supposes.)
Well, no such compliment from this current doctor. I remind him that, hey, hello, my father died not from cholesterol but from eating a big ol’ bowl of Oops, All Prostate Cancer, and he says, crestfallen, “Oh.” Then he thinks about it and you can see the war on his face where he’s deciding if he’s going to glove-up and do the deed. The slot machine in his eyes stops spinning and it lands on, mmm, not today, Satan.
Instead he just says, “We’ll just have the blood test check your PSA numbers, no digital test necessary.”
And so endeth the appointment. Now, I get it, this is far from the worst anyone has experienced — and certainly women get a lot more handily dismissed than I do. (God only knows what trans people have to deal with at the average American doctor; I imagine it is, how you say, unideal.) When I had COVID this past go-round, they gave me Paxlovid fast. My wife got COVID and they told her to eat rocks. I had to call and kick over a bunch of bee-hives telling them they were being sexist by denying her the same medication I was getting, and they finally relented and gave her the drug, too. So, even there, a disparity from the same doctor.
I bring this up because, you know, I find when you have a lack of trust in one doctor, it kind of cascades outward — the doubt, the distrust, it reverberates. It means I’m less interested in going to him for problems, for care, because either I can only bring up the one thing that’s bothering me, or worse, he’s just gonna say “BMI cholesterol” loudly at my broken ankle or my pulsating neck tumor. When I get inconsistent, incomplete, or outright wrong information from a health provider, it dents and dings my overall feelings about healthcare in general — and my feelings about healthcare in general, as a capitalist endeavor driven by money as much as (if not more than) actual health, ain’t great as-is.
It’s not just that they’re wrong sometimes. Science is wrong often! Then we adapt, we course correct, we learn and grow. But healthcare providers seem extra resistant to that growth, to any new thinking, and are still just as happy throwing antibiotics at a clearly viral infection even though it… doesn’t do anything, like teachers who give an excess of homework just because parents demand it, not because it actually improves anything at all. And once you start to doubt the doctor, once you start to doubt why they want to just throw medication at a thing instead of trying to root out a cause or find deeper adjustments, that doubt swells and blooms.
And it becomes much easier to end up in the place where you’re questioning good advice, where you’re doubting settled science, because your doctor — your representative in this strange world! — isn’t someone you trust as easily as you’d like. It’s like holes in rotten wood — spores are going to get in there and grow, and those spores could be stuff like anti-vaxxer nonsense bullshit. Right? We have to be our own advocates in medical spaces, but being our own advocates means… trying to know ourselves but also trying to know more than our own doctors know. Which leads us to potentially harmful sources of information and, of course, as information fidelity online is getting worse and worse (search engine enshittification!), the fidelity of good medical information is worse, too. Made worse, by exploitative actors and by unregulated unfettered capitalism.
Not everyone is well-versed in critically-thinking every problem, and it’s easy to be like, “Well, yeah, my doctor was wrong here, so when they tell me to get vaccinated, I’m like, hey, maybe I should question that a little bit. And then I found one of the Kennedy’s saying that nature is good and vaccines are bad and I agree with the first part and my doctor is a dickhead soooo…”
What I’m suggesting here is that your doctor is your first line of defense against all the bullshit, and all too often, they’re a very, very weak defense. I know friends who had doctors tell them stuff like, “Whoa, don’t get that COVID vaccine, it changes your dang DNA.” Like, no it fucking does not. But there they are. Medical personnel. Saying it. Telling you that, or not to wear a mask, or take these antibiotics for a non-bacterial problem, or, or, or.
It just kinda sucks.
I have no solution here, I have no deeper thoughts, I just want to yell and sigh and grump a bit here. But also I wanted to point out that bad experiences with doctors has a knock-on ripple effect. (And no, I am not an anti-vaxxer, give me the shots, get a mask on my face when needed, and I try to take my health seriously, erm, maybe sometimes too seriously, given that I have hypochondriac obsessiveness at times.)
Again, tl;dr I don’t like my doctor, and I need to find a new one.
Which is a sucky journey, even suckier than like, buying a mattress. And buying a mattress is a journey into Hell.
INTO HELL.
Anyway.
Have a nice day.
Buy my books or I explode, like the bus from Speed.
James says:
I have had the same experience with a neurosurgeon recently. It’s never fun and I trust doctors as far as I could throw them.
January 31, 2024 — 3:11 PM
lfthoman says:
YOUR DOCTOR SUCKS. Obviously you know this, hence the title of this post. But I just wanted you to know that I concur. He is the worst. Please jettison him and his whole practice out the nearest life-airlock, and godspeed in finding a new medical provider who actually, like, provides medical expertise. Especially if that person is going to be poking around your colon. And/or sphincter. No real way to make that experience GREAT, but maybe it can suck less? I shall hold out hope for you.
January 31, 2024 — 3:16 PM
Hemu Nayak says:
I am a physician and this is a hilarious if depressing account that I really enjoyed – this doc and the entire clinic – sucks
January 31, 2024 — 3:18 PM
Melissa Behrend says:
I swear, they are so bad. I’ve suffered from migraines since I was a teenager, and I’ve had one doctor tell me to (and I quote!) “pray them away” and another doctor flat out tell me she “didn’t believe” in migraines!
The healthcare system is so broken.
January 31, 2024 — 3:19 PM
judytaylor2013 says:
You made me laugh until I cried. I concur. I wear masks when I go into public spaces. When asked why I’m wearing a mask, I usually answer with, “Why do I wear a seatbelt?” (I mean, I don’t only wear a seatbelt because I know I’m going to be in a crash THIS TIME, and I don’t wear the seatbelt any other times because I somehow know I’m NOT GOING TO BE IN A CRASH… )Or I guess I could say, “Cause I live in America?”
January 31, 2024 — 3:20 PM
Matt Forbeck says:
That does suck. I came by to say, though, that if you’re going in for the colonoscopy, they can do the endoscopy (upper GI) at the same time. (My doc calls it an upper-lower.) Keeps you from having to go through all the sedation, etc., twice.
January 31, 2024 — 3:21 PM
Eliza Key says:
Is the height thing a nurse joke or something? I went to a new doc and the nurse was about to measure my weight/height, but before she starts she says, “How tall do you THINK you are?” Her tone was a little weird and overly excited, but I say, “I think about 5’7.” She kind of goes “pffft, hmm, lets see if you’re right!” Like we were on a gameshow. I ended up being 5’6 and half, and it was like this woman won the lottery. She starts laughing and says “No one ever knows how tall the really are!” like it was the best joke. It felt low-key mean, like she was making fun of me for being a half inch off? It was so weird.
January 31, 2024 — 3:22 PM
JOHANNAH says:
This is so shiity and I don’t know how people are made to navigate this nonsense. Like every ailment is because you’re fat and not because, you know, it’s RSV or anything else not involved with the literal body density of a person. Good luck and godspeed on your quest for a new DR.
January 31, 2024 — 3:23 PM
Marni Boyd says:
If you weren’t nearly 1k miles from me, I’d swear we went to the same dr office. I came in, feeling like hell, grabbed a mask and they all said the same thing, that I didn’t need to wear it. I didn’t know what was wrong with me. I wore it and I was diagnosed with strep throat, so yeah, I was contagious.
Your gnome remark had me laughing. Loved it.
January 31, 2024 — 3:29 PM
Rose says:
I hate that this is not remotely a unique experience. It really erodes trust. Also, you look like a viking, I thought they inverted the numbers for your height, but that correction was super creepy.
January 31, 2024 — 3:31 PM
Rebecca Ruth Seidel says:
I feel this so much. Since I moved back to the farm, I’ve used my parents’ doctor, and I want to have faith in her. She saved my dad’s life when she picked up on his heart murmur after 50 years of everyone missing it. They say she’s so good… but it just feels like she’s not listening to me? Or trying to push me out the door? Thankfully, she doesn’t harp on BMI stuff, but when I got a bunch of fucked up lab results back, I had to call HER to look at them. There’s something that’s been off about me for the past few months, and I can’t put my finger on it, but I was trying to explain to her that I’m so tired, I don’t think I could work a full-time job outside the home because I’m constantly exhausted and she just… shrugged it off?
The bonus is she’s been working in the system for a while now and has an absolutely fantastic knowledge of local specialists. Every single one she’s sent me to has been a treasure. So, apathetic GP who doesn’t address my issues? But when I get sent to specialists, they’re all amazing.
I feel like I should find another doctor, but do I want to go through the work of finding another one who could be worse? I don’t know.
Also, as a gal who is about to go in for her FOURTH colonoscopy, (second with an endoscopy), you got this. They’re really not as horrible as people make them out to be. I find the whole thing oddly relaxing. People leave me alone all evening in the bathroom, then I get to go and take a LONG nap? It’s… oddly nice.
January 31, 2024 — 3:33 PM
Leah McClellan says:
Thanks for this! I read every word. I get it. Sucks.
January 31, 2024 — 3:33 PM
Shayla McBride says:
Chuck, couldn’t agree more strongly. I am, happily healthy, because my doctor is not proactive or curious abut my health. She waltzes in, addressed the usual (which you covered nicely), writes a scrip if necessary, and waltzes out. My daughter, on the other hand, is in the clutches of the American medical system and for over 120 days has been suffering (literally) their disorganized, profit-driven, haphazard, sorry-it’s-out-of-my-hands attention. As a result, she is paralyzed from the waist down. Long term? Unclear. You know that special place in hell? Blue Cross and their kin.
January 31, 2024 — 3:35 PM
M.A. Kropp says:
Ugh. Healthcare. Ugh. I must say, I have been lucky and have had some really good doctors. even now. Masking is optional unless you are sick. And if they suspect you are sick (cough, sniffles, etc.) they will ask you to mask. The nurse practitioner I see most often is very informed on new developments, willing to actually listen, and takes me seriously when I ask a question. My m-i-l goes to the same practice, but different doctor. And he is so stuck in the past it would be laughable if it wasn’t her health we are talking about. The woman is 90 and he has her on so many meds she doesn’t need (including one that has a very real risk of making her dementia *worse*). She won’t change, though. Been going to him forever. He knows me. Yeah, but he knows nothing about modern medicine.
January 31, 2024 — 3:36 PM
Jeanne Felfe says:
OMG! So true. I’m in the “hypochondriac obsessiveness” camp right along with you and for good reason. While I’ve been blessed with an amazing PCP since 2008, and some good ones prior, I’ve also been cursed with some total moron psychiatrists.
When I was a teen, my mom’s PCP taught me that an educated patient was his best asset. I took that to heart and go to appointments with a list of questions. I research everything because doctors are busy and miss things. I know what my bloodwork results mean (usually), and when I don’t, I know the questions to ask. I, too, have high cholesterol, but refuse a statin for the reasons you mention. I have autoimmune hepatitis and refuse because I don’t want to add to the liver burden. My PCP mentions it at each appointment, but he respects my opinion. He legally has to mention it or he could get in trouble. I respect that. Even exchange.
So, yeah, find a new doctor. There are good ones out there, but can be harder to find that a new mattress.
January 31, 2024 — 3:39 PM
Rowan M. says:
100% to all this. Urging someone to doff their respirator during a surge like this one is a massive red flag… basically tell me you don’t understand airborne transmission without telling me you don’t understand airborne transmission ♂️ I hope you feel better soon, Chuck!
January 31, 2024 — 3:41 PM
Amarand says:
It doesn’t get any better at the VA, with its (very likely AI-assisted) “advanced” EHR system. They make you fill out the questionnaire, then your nurse asks you all the fun questions again, then the doctor asks you those same questions, but adds in the “are you thinking about suicide?” question in six different ways.
The VA is weird about masking, too. They haven’t once told me “you don’t have to wear that in here.” They have masks at the door, and the screening officers to make sure you don’t look sick. They also scan you using infrared FLIR, so they can see if you have a fever, or are walking dead. There are places at the VA where you -must- wear a mask, and there are signs all over the place when you hit those areas. It’s about 50% of the employees and volunteers who wear masks, and about 10% of the patients/visitors. The sad thing is, masks work best when the sick people wear them, and aren’t as useful for reception, so it’s way better if everyone just wears them, especially in a medical setting where almost all of the patients are sick with something you don’t want to catch. And why don’t the healthcare workers want that protection from the patients!? It’s insane.
If it makes you feel any better, I have four bottles (I counted) of various Rx PPIs from the years. I’ve probably taken a week or two’s worth of the oldest batch, none out of the recent ones. They don’t work very well – even the prescription – and my doctor said on every visit “those things will give you cancer, you know…? Oh, did you want a refill?” It’s like “what?!” And I say no, or sometimes I say “sure, why not?” thinking I can cancel the Rx order, but it’s mail order pharmacy, so it’s automatically filled, my HSA billed, and now I have another one of those tribble PPI bottles on my shelf.
I personally think if the OTC strength is working for you, you should stick with it. Or wean yourself off of it, if you think it’s not doing much for you. I think the rebound acid reflux when you get off PPIs sucks but if it’s only short term?
Medical and insurance stuff sucks. Thanks for reminding us we’re not alone!
January 31, 2024 — 3:48 PM
Natalie says:
Oh no. So sorry you have to deal with that. I hope you have the luxury of firing that guy and finding someone that is both good and is a caring human. I know it’s rare, but they do exist! When I had to switch the scheduling person at our local med mall clinic thingy was kind enough to chat with me a bit about what type of dr I was looking for (type of personality, quality, etc.) and they had a few recommendations that were great! (I wish I knew who that scheduler was so I could send them a thank you note.) My new doc is that rare combo of good and caring that I had never experienced in a doctor before (aside from the occasional specialist), who wears masks and gets happy teary-eyed and thanks you when you say you’re up to date on vaxxs, asks me important health questions that I’ve never been asked before and didn’t ever think to ask myself. You know, advocates for my health. Weird, right? Anyway, as awful and broken as the US medical system is, there is a little tiny minuscule goodness hanging around still. I wish you all the luck in hopefully finding someone better. And a quick recovery from your cold. <3
January 31, 2024 — 3:50 PM
aprilp999 says:
“No Lindt truffle gently pressed into my mouth!”
January 31, 2024 — 3:53 PM
Altogether Too Exhausted says:
Having worked for a lot of asshole doctors in my time, and having been chastised by my family (all college-educated Democratic voters who initially took covid precautions) for still taking covid precautions, this post was nothing short of triggering. I can feel my carotid like a big cartoon pulse going BANG BANG BANG in my neck.
I don’t know what to do at this point other than to basically withdraw from society. I literally said to myself in the bathtub last night, “You know, I think I might never go to the doctor or the dentist again.” I have, like, a half dozen health issues and a broken veneer in the “aesthetic zone” that makes me look like a meth head, but here we are.
Doctors and their office staffs are killing people. That’s the long and short of it. The practitioners who vowed to do no harm are contributing to excess deaths and shortened lifespans, and all we get is gaslighting and shame.
I’m old enough to remember when PMS was “all in your head.” My fibromyalgia is still being treated by “just exercise more.” The last doctor I saw (a family medicine guy because there are no more internal medicine physicians available for me at the tender age of 62) wasn’t sure adults reallllllly needed medication for ADHD.
And like you, I sometimes question my reality. Wait, is their knowledge right?
But then I remember the patient my cardiologist boss flatlined during a chemical stress test, in spite of everyone in the clinic telling him her ECG contraindicated the drug she was given. And how if I hadn’t called the code — pulling rank on the doc in question, who just stood there with a clinically dead patient on the bed — the woman wouldn’t have lived to get a temporary and then a permanent pacemaker.
I remember the fellow who sat up in the OR in the middle of cardiac bypass surgery, his chest split open like a baked potato, because the anesthesiologist had a bad habit of leaving his patients “a little light on the table.” The old joke about what you call the guy who graduates last in his medical school class is true.
Finding new docs for me usually involves paying out of pocket. It’s like playing Russian roulette with your healthcare and your bank account, and it sucks. I hope it works out for you.
JFYI, as I understand it, the studies on PPIs show correlation but not causation between that class of drug and the undesirable adverse events. So, they don’t know, for example, because more overweight people who are prone to heart disease tend to also take PPIs, if it’s their weight or the drug causing a higher risk of CV events. Or both. I wouldn’t say PPIs are completely safe, but a lot of real doctors (and Facebook doctors) don’t know how to interpret a clinical trial (I also worked in pharma), and they misinterpret data in one direction or another. This class is probably not as dangerous as purported. Untreated GERD can have serious esophageal consequences, so there is that to consider.
If you have familial hypercholesterolemia, it’s going to be hard to get down. Personally, I would work on raising my HDL and lowering my LDL with diet and exercise (I’m sorry) if you don’t want to suffer through the side effects of statins, which are real and also worth weighing in terms of QOL (and may or may not have a huge effect on your numbers).
Hope you get over your RSV soon. Thanks for this post. It was cathartic reading it and responding to it. But I’m sorry you had to write it.
January 31, 2024 — 3:55 PM
GW says:
FINE fine post mr. wendigo.
January 31, 2024 — 3:56 PM
jinksbee says:
The last time my wife went to the doctor, a random person asked her “Why are you wearing a mask?” She looked around the rather crowded elevator, looked back at Ms. Random and replied “Because this is a fucking hospital.” (verbatim) Everyone but Ms. Random laughed.
January 31, 2024 — 3:56 PM
Beck says:
OH MY GOD. The repeated asking of the same questions. Like, why are you writing it down, lady? That drives me insane. I’m sitting in a backless nightie on a table of crinkly paper, I’ve already been told I’m overweight and overdue for this that and the other and insulted and yes, that I’m shorter than my driver’s license says, and now you’re going to ask me to repeat, again, the pills I take and the pills my dad takes and the thing that killed my grandma? FFS.
January 31, 2024 — 4:12 PM
Marguerite Turley says:
Omg I have the familial high cholesterol too and my mother got pancreatitis from statins. Which *checks notes* can kill you, but he still wants to put me on them. So I had a CAT scan of plaque buildup and it came up 0! Which means the cholesterol isn’t filling up my arteries. Still things I should retest and maybe do statins! And I think all of the doylestown docs ask the same shut a million times so frustrating and they don’t even listen to the answers. Great post and I agree ‼️
January 31, 2024 — 4:20 PM
Kathleen Doan says:
Sorry to hear about the hellish experience at your doctor’s office. Sounds like everyone there is on some sort of autopilot/self driving death machine ride. In my experience, I’ve often found that any nurse-practitioner is head and shoulders above a typical MD for listening skills and routine care and follow up. Oh, and wait till you get to Medicare age – you don’t get an actual physical, you get an annual “wellness check”, which is just going over your history and what tests are due. Except for vital signs, no one examines anything.
January 31, 2024 — 4:26 PM
literacy2af8648f6db says:
I felt every word of this but also laughed out loud several times. I am extremely lucky to have a fantastic oncology team who I appreciate and trust –literally–with my life. But I am even luckier to have a husband who can make me laugh incredibly hard even while I’m sitting in a waiting room of the Cancer Center, to the point that everyone is staring at us. I swear, it’s the only thing that has gotten me through this last year without going nuts. Luckily, knock on every piece of wood in the universe, the treatments seem to have worked and the surgery was successful and I’m doing well now. I attribute that to both my medical teams’ skills and my husband’s (and my) very weird sense of humor. Because there’s nothing really all that entertaining about the US “health care” system as you so beautifully illustrate in your essay. It is so screwed up. And don’t get me started on insurance . . .
January 31, 2024 — 4:28 PM
Sidra says:
I’ve had so many appointments similar.
Please please fire that doctor. He’s a piece of shit.
I just had a followup with a pain management doctor (post getting MRI done) for pain flaring in my shoulder. He didn’t do a physical exam until after my husband spoke up about my pain. And then gave me a dexamethasone shot too.
January 31, 2024 — 4:30 PM
civilservant says:
Can’t remember the last time I laughed so hard at a blog post. I definitely concur that you need to look for a new doctor–ideally a younger one with more progressive/holistic ideas about health as opposed to a treat-the-current-symptoms kind. The fact that the doctors and nurses aren’t wearing mask is a big red flag. Also definitely stay away from the statins. Best health care professional I’ve encountered is my current personal trainer who is also a nutritionist. I meet with her once a week. In addition to working out (gotta strengthen that core), we also go over and tweak my diet. Don’t get my started about my Type II diabetes journey. Long story short, you are your own best healthcare advocate. Don’t take something if you don’t feel that it’s right for you even if a doctor recommends it.
January 31, 2024 — 4:31 PM
Michele Clement says:
Just wanted to say that I really enjoy reading all of your emails. I usually laugh my ass off which is something that I enjoy doing. Being retired and living alone at 70 leaves me plenty of time for laughing out loud. Retiring wasn’t my idea. The industry told me I’d aged out, like wtf does that mean? Oh, I don’t post on Instagram, Facebook or TiTok so I must not be relevant… It’s more about the number of followers you have than the quality of your work anymore. I find that such a sad thing…
I’d read your name in an article about Neil Gaiman. He mentioned you so I had to check you out. I’m also a Terry Pratchett fan and have been for years. I’ve started to buy your books on Amazon recently and hope you keep it up. We need you out here in the world. Just wanted you to know that.
January 31, 2024 — 4:40 PM
Seth G says:
How sad is it that when you see a good doctor, it feels like winning the lottery? I consider myself very lucky that I have good docs that I see (and I’ve seen a lot the past two years), but I know many are not so lucky. Hang in there folks, good medical support is out there, unfortunately you have to look for it.
January 31, 2024 — 4:47 PM
Jamie Chavez says:
Oh, friend. Yes. Find a new doctor. (I had a period of time when I had to do it 4 times in a row until I found a good one.) This all sounded SO familiar, I just had to tell you I get it. Thanks for the rant.
January 31, 2024 — 4:51 PM
Jo Chern says:
This has made me feel even better about my doctor than before. To be clear, not all her clinic associates. But her…her, with the stripe of purple in her dark brown hair who talks with me about everything and anything I bring up no matter what the appointment was for and who, as a geriatrician, always laughs about me being, at 70, her “baby” patient.
I herniated a disc just before Christmas. Caused root nerve pain down into my thigh and then really down below my knee and into my shin. Worst pain I ever had (not having had children…yes, I’m female…no judging). Every step I tried taking and I didn’t try taking many my tibia felt like it was going to break.
Her staff recommended some things…finally after I bitched long enough started me on gabapentin. Several x-rays showed nothing. I kept saying “I think it’s a herniated disc at L4-L5” because I’m a nerd and besides it’s my profession. She finally called, said she wanted to see me personally and apologized for it taking so long. Ordered a spine MRI. Well, what do you know, as she said in the note she sent after “you were correct. It’s a slipped disc at L4-L5”. So I love my doctor event though they can’t do anything more than time and meds.
Oh…and the clinics, hospital, every place I went? Masks are mandatory…
January 31, 2024 — 5:01 PM
Gina N. Anderson says:
Agreed. No one trusts doctors these days. Their bedside manner is so terrible and yes, they are very dismissive of women’s health concerns. They also prescribe medications like candy.
January 31, 2024 — 5:24 PM
Emily says:
Try being trans and having a chronic illness (waves sadly).
I’m sorry you had that experience, and I’m also sorry that I can completely believe it happening. It makes me so mad that caring for PEOPLE has gotten so…commodified. You, and everyone, deserves better.
January 31, 2024 — 5:25 PM
terribleminds says:
Ooof. I am so sorry.
February 1, 2024 — 8:04 AM
smokingpenpress says:
Yeah, that does really suck. I’ve had to change docs before, and I waited about 2 years too long. With my current doc… when I went in for my routine annual, my husband had covid. I had no symptoms and tested negative every day, but still wore a mask everywhere I went. At my doc’s office, I explained to the nurse why I had a mask… she said thank you, and put on a mask. When the doc came in, she started to enter (sans mask) stepped back out and came in with a mask.. and said I understand you have a household member who has covid. I acknowledged this was true and the doc said Thank you.
These are the sorts of medical staff we all need.
January 31, 2024 — 5:30 PM
Mully says:
THANK YOU. I felt like you were INSIDE my mind during my visit last Friday to the ER with my child and her high fever. Fevers dont get that high, the doctor said, for LITERALLY no reason. Why call me a liar? Even if I WAS a liar, who does that serve? When I insisted it did, he said, “it doesn’t matter,” and flapped his dismissy mits at me. The visit spiraled. (I wasn’t a liar, I have worked in Healthcare for 20 yrs, but that’s not the point)
BUT i felt INSANE like it was impossible and could not have happened. Thank you for verifying the truth of my experience. Now will someone please organize our revolution before we explode???
January 31, 2024 — 5:37 PM
Ed says:
Moved cross country 7 years ago. Kept my GP, back on the east coast, because I trust him. Every 6 months or so I make an appointment. I’m making the trip anyway to see family. It isn’t worth the trouble to find another GP. If I have a bad cold or step on a nail, I’ll go to an urgent care center, they’re on every corner.
January 31, 2024 — 5:50 PM
Kilian Metcalf says:
Try a female doctor or even a nurse practitioner. It’s not 100%, but my experience is that they are more likely to listen.
January 31, 2024 — 6:02 PM
Marc Severson says:
If you’re in Tucson, I can recommend a good doc for you–my daughter. Let me know. PS I feel your pain only oppositely, i.e. I was at my doc’s a couple of days ago and they listed me at 5′ 7″. I sent them a message saying that I’m 5′ 9 3/4″. Normally I wouldn’t care but I’m sure it affects my BMI and since losing over 100 lbs. I’m a little touchy about weight stuff and besides they’re the ones that measured me!
January 31, 2024 — 6:09 PM
Tamar J Jaffe says:
Thank you for making misery funny, Chuck. We count on you.
January 31, 2024 — 6:24 PM
terribleminds says:
Misery must be made funny, otherwise, it’s just misery.
February 1, 2024 — 8:03 AM
Bonnie Robb says:
Fire him !!! What a tool !
January 31, 2024 — 6:29 PM
AlexKnit17 says:
Sadly, the BMI-thing is not just America. I’m from the Netherlands and have the same issue. I’ve been having health problems for years and every new thing is more weird than the former. Blood tests show something is wrong. Found a possible diagnosis that would explain a lot of my problems, go to the doctor and talk to them. They order another bloodtest and send me to a specialist.
He listened for all but five minutes, looked me over and dead-ass told me all my health problems were caused by me being overweight. Having insane allergic reactions to insects? Fat. Constant inflammations in all my joints? Fat. Weird episodes of brainfog? Fat. Common cold evolving into virus infection followed by a bacterial infection and being sick for at least sex weeks every time? Fat.
Go lose weight and all of it will magically disappear! Or, that was what he wanted me to believe. Now, I’m reluctant to go back to my own doctor with so much as a skin rash because they will probably just tell me to lose weight again. I hate the medical industry with a passion. I felt your post deep in my soul. I hope you find a better doctor!
January 31, 2024 — 6:29 PM
christine chrisman says:
Yes this, SO MUCH this. I could bitch for hours and hours, but it comes down to taking the time to find a GP that works well with you, and I don’t take that time, and sometimes jump right to the specialist I want when my insurance will let me, and then that person is always like, do you have a GP? and i’m like, yeah cause I have to but I’ve never seen them, and they always give me the weirdest look….but your experience is like mine and it just makes me wanna SCREAM!!
January 31, 2024 — 6:33 PM
Victoria says:
Boy does this resonate. Just today we had to deal with Internal Medicine because my husband’s primary care doc has left. A new doctor is available but a new patient visit must be had before she’s Jim’s official physician, which means another co-pay and an appointment in May. What happens between now and May if care is needed? That remains to be seen. Thanks for the humor, Chuck, cuz it’s certainly the only way to survive these days.
January 31, 2024 — 8:06 PM
Rosanne C. says:
Throughly enjoyed your post! Lol I do ‘get’ the message you’re conveying (besides venting about a lousy doctor), and I love that you did it with humor.
January 31, 2024 — 8:16 PM
Michael Chesley Johnson says:
Do we have the same doctor? My last visit went exactly like this!
January 31, 2024 — 8:41 PM
Heather says:
So sorry for this horrible experience. Why wouldn’t healthcare people want to wear a mask, especially during cold/flu/choose the sickness time. Baffling. I’ve had opposite experiences – really liked my doctor, who double masked, and she left. Found a new one I liked, he’s now leaving as well. Having to find a new doctor is such a pain. Hope you feel better soon.
January 31, 2024 — 9:07 PM
Lesli Richardson says:
Hoooo boy. People ask me why we still drive 90 miles one-way to see our GP. I have fibromyalgia, CFS, arthritis, a wiggy cardiac issue, and now long Covid (caught it despite being careful before I was eligible for the vaccine in 1/21). Spouse came out as trans in the summer of ’21. We’d been seeing the same GP for nearly twenty years, had followed him through several practices, and he finally had to retire due to medical issues. He was FANTASTIC. We LOVED him. He was attentive and listened and knew if we came in for an issue other than annual routine exams that we really had a problem. He’s the one who diagnosed my fibromyalgia years and years ago when plenty of doctors didn’t even believe it was a “thing”. We adored him.
The new doctor that replaced him in the practice is a young woman who is an absolute delight, and we love her. I tried to find a doctor closer to home, but despite the fact that I do NOT take and am not asking to take any heavy duty pain killers for my fibromyalgia and arthritis, as soon as I said “fibromyalgia” their eyes glazed over and they’d almost go robot-like reciting that they didn’t do pain management.
Not looking for pain management, MFer. If you’d look at my chart you’d see I am not taking any and not looking for any. I gave up. I’d rather have the inconvenience of the drive.
Thus, we drive. In fact, I had to do so yesterday because I have a cough that won’t go away. Everyone in the office was masked. So, yay! (Not covid, but bronchitis and possibly the start of COPD despite the fact that I’ve NEVER smoked anything but meat on a grill.)
Our medical system is F’ed up six ways to Sunday, for sure. When you find a good doctor you like that takes your insurance, cling to them like a dingleberry on a shih tzu’s hind end.
January 31, 2024 — 9:20 PM
Anna says:
Totally relate to this. I’ve been dismissed for over a decade in some issues (I’m female though, so unfortunately I’m used to it). Now I have a good doctor for the first time, and after every appointment I’m simply blown away that she actually does her job.
January 31, 2024 — 9:50 PM
Tracy Black says:
Similar experience with an NP who told my 93-year-old mother that masks and vaccines don’t work. I complained to the medical conglomerate he works for, and exactly nothing happened. It’s fucking infuriating.
January 31, 2024 — 9:53 PM