Tuesday, October 31, 2006

The President's Club

During a recent visit to my hem/onc’s office I noticed that my medical file is now about the size of a phone book for a mid-sized city. It is larger than most of the other files that I see stuffed sideways into the open-faced cabinets arrayed in back of the reception desk.

And so it occurred to me that as a patient with a chronic disease who needs treatment regularly and who has a fairly long life expectancy, I am a cash cow in the cancer business. Most other patients at this office either beat their cancer, or don’t, and their files probably cover fewer treatments over a shorter period of time. Having chronic lymphocytic le
ukemia makes me a frequent flyer, so to speak, a prize customer.

So where are my rewards? I mean, airlines have private lounges for their best customers. Even Camping World has something called the President’s Club. Why not a President’s Club for CLL patients?

For example, I migh
t enjoy a private infusion room -- nay, suite -- with a genuine leather recliner, none of that vinyl stuff. And why can’t my IV pole be at least gold-plated? Where, oh where, is my plasma TV? My private nurse? The dessert tray, fer chrissakes?

“Champagne with your Rituxan, sir?”

“Don’t mind if I do.”

Clink!

But no, I’m stuck in there with the hoi polloi, some of them using cheap, off-patent drugs. I am a Rituxan user. My insurance pays $5,000 a pop for this stuff; in the last three years I have brought this office around $150,000 in gross income. Yet the management is forcing me to root, raccoon-like, for bags of peanuts from an oversized communal snack basket. What is this, the Motel 6 of oncology?

In all seriousness, or at least partial seriousness, there are times when having CLL can be used to one’s advantage. After one recent Rituxan treatment, Marilyn and I went to our favorite hotel in Phoenix. I plopped my bandaged hand on the counter and announced to the twenty-something clerk that I had been doing chemotherapy and that I needed a quiet room in which to rest. This led to a free upgrade.

When Marilyn and I flew to Florida recently during the height of the gels-on-planes scare, we were able to bring a bottle of Purell hand sanitizer on board with us. This required showing the TSA guards a report stating I have CLL and am immune-compromised, which was backed up by me pointing to my neck and saying, “It looks puffy because I have swollen lymph nodes from my leukemia.”

Indeed, at the Miami airport one of the Northwest Airlines clerks fell all over himself being helpful and gladly agreed to give our bags priority handling even though we weren’t flying first class.

The best story I’ve heard came from a fellow patient in the infusion room, not a CLLer, who lost her hair to chemotherapy. While speeding down the freeway, she was pulled over by a cop.

“Officer,” she said, whipping off her baseball cap to reveal her bald head, “I am late for my chemotherapy.”

It worked, of course. No ticket.

Let that be an inspiration to you the next time Cytoxan does nasty things to your hair follicles.


And while I still wish I could get a complimentary foot massage while being hand-fed Godiva chocolates, I'll take what I can get.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I noticed the same thing at Tom's last visit to the onc. His folder was so big that I wondered if the Dr. could really find the lastest results in all that paperwork. And this was just one of his Dr.s. I'd love to see MDAnderson's file on him!!!!!

Anonymous said...

MD Anderson has an electronic medical record, and before long, everyone will. (This is being mandated.) So charts will thin.

David, I like your sense of humor with respect to the chemo room. However, perhaps the lack of VIP treatment is because Rituxan is no longer one of the most expensive drugs. Not that it is any cheaper, but the newer targeted therapies rival the cost of transplants.

Anonymous said...

This is a hoot David!
I have always thought that with a cancer dx. there should be round trip tickets to somewhere plush to contemplate life. Reality sucks!
However, after initial tx. at MDACC I asked at the gate if there was a chence for an upgrade. The attendant asked based on what?
I told her that it was our anniversary (it really was) and I had just finished my first course of chemo (I did--RFC).
We sat in first class, and I sipped the champagne--not a good idea. Rituxan and alchohol may have caused a few moments of throat tightening. The seats where nice!
(oh, and OSU does have flat screens for their folks in the "chemo-cliners")

Take good care,

Cash cow too.