Wednesday, November 13, 2024

The Examined Life

I’ve yammered about various health issues and concerns in this space previously and y’all have been wonderfully indulgent. As the audience is younger than me, I don’t mind being a canary in the coal mine and providing the occasional non-clinical take on the joys of aging. 

Entertaining as it is to read about enlarged atria and mitral valve regurgitation, let me take a different tack and offer a suggestion: Record stuff. Everything. Every condition, procedure, screening, test, diagnosis. Torn ligaments, swollen prostates, lumpy breasts, blood sugar spikes, heart flutters, uterine fibroids, the unwelcome polyp or two. Put them in a journal, notebook, computer disc, hard drive, video diary, whatever your preferred receptacle. Research your parents and families and their health issues through the years, as best you can, and record them, as well. 

To paraphrase the minstrel Gordon Sumner: Every bone you break, every med you take, I’ll be watching you. The information will benefit not only you, but the youngsters. Health care will become more diverse and specialized as you age. Walking into a doc’s office with a reasonably comprehensive personal and family history will help them treat you and identify potential future concerns. As your kids get older and become responsible for their own health care and consider starting families, their own records and yours will inform them and their doctors. That info could prompt early and preventive screenings and practices. Who knows, insurance might even cover it. Hey, miracles happen. 

Think of a family health history as your kids’ least favorite Christmas present. I say this as a habitual note taker and hoarder professionally who was pretty cavalier, if not negligent, about personal info. I kept box scores and media guides and news files for decades, but often couldn’t pull when I had blood work or a colonoscopy or stress test. Only in recent years have I gotten more diligent about taking notes and keeping records related to me. Some of you may already do this. If so, salute. If not, there’s time. 

Granted, digitized record keeping enables access to years’ worth of tests and treatments quickly and easily, so in some cases one need not carry and pull out the family album. But if you’re referred to a cardiac or gastro or endocrinology doc, there’s no guarantee that their computers, or more likely the staffers who man their computers, will communicate with your primary care doc or whomever did the referring. 

I’ve experienced instances where my local cardiac guy’s findings were unknown to a cardiac specialist I see elsewhere and vice versa, even though they’re in the same (gargantuan) network, and neither’s diagnosis made it to my primary care doc before I saw him for a regular check-up months later. Keeping your own records reduces the chances of falling through the cyber cracks, or at least providing some background if the doc standing before you makes a face as if she was suddenly handed a Turkish train schedule. 

Also, evident midway through my seventh decade is that the disruptor gremlins don’t politely wait in line or take turns, as some of you are doubtless aware. A thyroid issue may arise alongside heart arrhythmia, joining that touch of arthritis in your knees and ankles for an assemblage of delight. Chronicling all of it won’t alleviate the problems but provides a sense that we’re aware and not a dinghy helplessly caught in a squall. We’re essentially security cams or mall cops when it comes to our health, unable to remedy a situation but at least recognize that something irregular is afoot and alert the authorities. 

Which prompts one more recommendation: listen to your body. I get that most of us don’t want to come off as alarmists or hypochondriacs, hustling to the doc for every tweak and ache and ailment. I still tend to chalk up various discomforts as old guy distinctions and tolerate them. But once we cross 50, any condition that lingers is worth exploring. Understand, as well, that some conditions present themselves, others do not. So get screened for the stuff you can’t see or feel right away. Erosion comes for us all. Give yourself a chance to endure it knowledgeably, if not always comfortably. Sedation remains an option, and methods and ingredients may vary.

19 comments:

Whitney said...

Hear, hear, my man. Duly noted. I've had the same primary care doc for 20 years, and he's retiring in 2 months. The prospects of a new one gives me anxiety. My guy has seen me through a lot, including MRSA (twice), multiple surgeries for a hernia, sleep apnea, and all the usual getting-older failings of eyes, ears, skin, shoulders, lungs, gut, etc. Oh, and blood pressure. And probably some stuff I am forgetting.

I am historically terrible at scheduling and following up with doctors. My PCP has been aggressive every time I have expressed any discomfort and arranged referrals. Didn't always save me from being stupid, but he's been great. And I landed him simply because he was attached to the medical school of which my dad was in the employ back then.

I'll take heed to Dave's recs for documentation and try not to be the cliché that doesn't go to the doctor until it's too late.

mr kq said...

Joey, have you ever been in a Turkish prison?

Had second and final round of lower back ablation shots yesterday after 4 months of misery. Procedure was no picnic either. Should get some relief for up to a year though so I've got that going for me.

rob said...

after 5+ decades of comfortably healthy blood pressure readings, had a period of high blood pressure recently. i assume it was stress related, what with the company being sold and all. bought a blood pressure cuff so i can measure it at home. part of the daily routine now. today's reading: strong to quite strong.

rob said...

i'm about to put on a suit for the first time since whitney's wedding. nonplussed.

Danimal said...

Ya ever seen a grown man naked?

This is so true OBX Dave. I've not done so personally, but from a family perspective one of my sisters put together a comprehensive list of family ailments, many very rare including spasmodic dysphonia, which not one, but two sisters deal with (why Bobby Kennedy sounds like he does). My old man was a veritable riddle for physicians including Mayo specialists. Another sister diagnosed w/a form of lupus while in her 40's, nieces and nephews with all sorts of weird shit tied to abnormal bone growth and not so weird including celiac. One of my nephews had a cancerous tumor found, at the ripe old age of 10, which ended well thank god. I'm not going to jinx myself here by commenting on my fortune, but as they say in Scotland, "touching wood". (not the self-gratification kind)

rob said...

MATT GAETZ FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL. I'M GOING TO ASPHYXIATE FROM LAUGHTER OR TEARS OR BOTH AT THE SAME TIME.

rootsminer said...

How is that appointment going to be outdone?

OBX dave said...

I'll see your Gaetz, and raise you a Gabbard. Honestly, TFG is just trolling all of us now with these picks. Why would any of our allies share a takeout menu with us, let alone intel? And nothing restores confidence in law enforcement like a sexual predator as AG.

Hey Danimal, good on your sister for compiling info. Will help all of you going forward. I'd like to think that with advances in medicine, organized and comprehensive family records really will lead to preventive and proactive steps, and not just reactive responses and after-the-fact treatment. Particularly when it becomes apparent that the proactive stuff saves money in long run.

Marls said...

I’ll be interested to see how many of these folks get past the senate. This is going to be Mitch’s last dance.

OBX dave said...

Opinionators who float the idea that Trump makes a couple of outrageous Cabinet picks as sacrifices so that his remaining choices will more easily sail through confirmation mostly convey that they've learned nothing. Gives him too much credit. That's not how he thinks.

He's done whatever he wanted his entire life. Now that he's been re-elected, with a majority and compliant courts and legislators, he's certain that he answers to no one. He made clear during the campaign that he wanted to take down opponents and "enemies," and disrupt present govt. structures. These folks and whoever comes later will help him do so. Pretty simple. He's John Gotti, not Machiavelli.

rob said...

are the cavs for real? is wemby a space alien? can jj redick actually coach? is lebron a space alien? discuss.

rob said...

and, timmy, i think it's thune's first dance, no? mitch won't be running the show, at least not publicly.

rob said...

according to the bluesky, the onion has purchased infowars. if this is true, it's a spectacular troll and i am all the way here for it.

rob said...

this, from ben collins, the ceo of the onion, via bluesky:

"Hi everyone.

The Onion, with the help of the Sandy Hook families, has purchased InfoWars.

We are planning on making it a very funny, very stupid website.

We have retained the services of some Onion and Clickhole Hall of Famers to pull this off.

I can't wait to show you what we have cooked up."

Donna said...

I'm with Beach Dave. The "shock" - the "stunned" - pronouncements...what a fucking joke. This is exactly what he said he'd do. He's outrageous and ridiculous. And he doesn't give a rats ass what people are qualified for or will do. He isn't qualified to be president, yet he is. What a joke. And how horrifying for us in the world. OMDL many many times!!

Donna said...

I'm so tired of all the outrage. It's just like all the "can't believe it" when shootings happen...why the hell not? It happens everywhere, anywhere, all the wheres, in America. There is not one single place where you can guarantee you won't be shot in this country. People need to stop saying they're shocked when it happens. Good f-ing grief! This is the freaking same thing.
Can you tell I have some anger to let go?

On a diff subject - SPORTS: Can one of you please explain the College football rankings to me? And look I'm really not dumb and actually have followed along here and there over the years...but how come Louisville (of all places) is ranked in top 25 at 6-3 and Clemson at 7-2 is 20th, and Pitt at 7-2 is not ranked? And I know "strength of schedule" ...but still?

And who wins tonight - Washington or Philadelphia??

OBX dave said...

Hey Donna, a few words on college football rankings: first, think of them as a weekly snapshot, nothing more or less. Louisville beat Clemson, but Clemson has looked better lately and begins weekly eval process with more cachet. Pitt just lost to pretty meh Virginia, thus the trap door from the rankings. Indiana is no more the fifth-best team in the country than you or me. But they haven't lost and they're a good story. Similar to Army at No. 9.

Second, and perhaps more relevant, rankings are a compendium aggregated from a lot of folks who don't see teams and games. Beat writers and news outlet people. The Miami Herald and Portland Oregonian college beat guys who vote don't spend much time watching SEC or Big 12 teams. Not possible. They look at scores and stats, and arrange their own top 25. Somebody might vote Texas A&M 10th, another voter 22nd. They total the votes and hope that the volume of voters will tamp down irregularities and provide a reasonable ranking. Hope this wasn't too much man-splaining.

rob said...

somebody here didn't watch the hoosiers boatrace a solid nebraska team

OBX dave said...

Somebody here maybe didn't see Indiana squeeze past pedestrian Michigan last week, so (Frances McDormand voice in Fargo) there's no call for you to get snippy.