Saturday, November 13, 2010

Thursday morning cancer conference

It was the weekly cancer conference, and it was optional. Yes, his attending would be presenting a couple cases, but this short white coat had long grown tired of playing this game of impressing his superiors. But, he went anyway. Come to think of it, he probably only went because he was chasing an interest that he really didn’t have—and, on a deeper level, a calling he could never fully embrace.
The first case presented sounded familiar: Adenocarcinoma of the lung. Brain metastasis. Post-radiation treatment VATS pneumonectomy. PFTs had checked out pre-operatively. Patient recovered relatively well. Residual ataxia from the neurological deficits.

This was unfortunate because he painted houses. How would he make a living for himself if he could not stand on a ladder? The cardiothoracic surgeon wasn’t sure. His shoulders shrugged with a hint of sadness and sympathy. This was the story that was often left untold when a patient left the hospital—even if the surgery was a clinical success.

The painter had a name, and the short white coat sat there scrolling through the list of patients he had been generating over the last three weeks. All he remembered was watching the surgeons pull his diseased lung out between the ribs, and the painter’s face the day he was discharged to go home. He remembered that the painter had voiced concern about his job, but despite all this, the name eluded him.

He played the harmonica. He had brought in his harmonica that last day to see if he could still play it after the surgery. Indeed, he had found that he could. So strange; this was all he could remember. He played the harmonica.

The purpose of the conference was to provide a venue for oncologists, pathologists, and surgeons to discuss treatment plans, to collaborate so that future patients could be better served. At the same time, these conferences became a place to commemorate those that had passed through their care. Because for every 55 year old with adenocarcinoma of the lung and brain mets, there was a painter who painted no more—a painter who was recovering at home and playing his harmonica.

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