Hi,
So it turns out today was just the visit with the Oncologist. I'm not altogether happy with him. I'm on public transport to get there, it takes about 1.5 hours, I arrived at 9am and he'd already been. The new hospital she's at is giving her Oxycontin and Endone (the other one where she was at previously when we thought this was strictly surgical was giving Endone/Panadol) and the combination of the two drugs and the unexpected visit meant that my mum wasn't able to ask all the questions she would have liked. She asked him to come back when I arrived and explained I was enroute and would be there all day, but he refused saying that he didn't need to talk to me cos there was nothing more to be said!
Also, we had thought this was a temporary hospital for the first round, and that future rounds would be at her preferred hospital - this is what the Oncologist had actually said to ME when we spoke briefly on the phone last week. Now the nurses say that the Oncologist wants all future treatments to be at the current hospital, that he doesn't offer Chemotherapy out of the other hospital, which doesn't make sense cos I *know* that other hospital offers Chemo, and he actually told me that the rest of the treatments could be there. I asked him: "Will it be a problem having the first Chemo treatment at one hospital, and the remaining treatments at another?" and he said that it wasn't. So either the nurses aren't really contacting him, or the Oncologist is lying, and it's my mum's life on the line here. My mum doesn't LIKE the current hospital where she's at. Aesthetically it's a dump, and even as a visitor it's a very depressing place to be - I want her out of there ASAP!
Thing is, this Oncologist is a friend of the surgeon who's going to be performing the RC eventually, so it's a tricky situation to be in. I think I need to phone the Cancer Council tomorrow for advice.
In other news, Ian, thank you for what you wrote. I know this forum needs rules, and maybe it wasn't appropriate for the forum, but I did appreciate the time and effort you went to and I *will* click those links!
Tanya: Yep, I come from a family of smokers (I'm a non-smoker), and watching them get sick one by one is excruciating, but especially with my mum, it's beyond even that. Thankfully she's stopped stone cold now, and I'll never be enabling that habit again.