Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BFF never did mammograms (host of reasons that she kept rationalizing.) Well, the kicker was that she had metastatic breast cancer (finally went to a doctor when it became the size of a golf ball and protruded into her armpit.) By then it was too late and she died 18m later. I often wonder what would have happened if she got regular mammograms.
Flip side - my sister gets them regularly, caught her breast cancer early, had it removed, did 10 courses of radiation (no chemo needed), and has been cancer free for 8y.
Figure out your insurance.
I have an acquaintance who got annual mammograms religiously (she was a nurse) but was nonetheless diagnosed with metastatic stage 4 breast cancer. Mammograms are a great screening tool but some forms of cancer are deadly and aggressive regardless of when you find them. Unfortunately.
THIS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve avoided it for 10 yrs after I did one, and it was horrible - painful, felt manhandled and disrespected.
However, a friend had cancer found during a mammogram just recently, with no other warning or symptoms or family hx.
So, I’m finally going next month.
I've never had a horrible experience. You need to go in with a good mindset. It's over quickly and you're in and out. I swear some people can't adult.
Maybe it’s possible not everyone has the same experience?
Might want to work on the compassion bit.
Anonymous wrote:No history of breast cancer in my family and had no results every year until I got complacent in my late 40s and skipped about 4 years. By the time I went back, I had a tumor the size of an egg.
I was lucky in that it turned out to be a very rare benign tumor called a PASH tumor (pseudo-angiomatous stromal hyperplasia) but I still had to have a surgical lumpectomy.
Now I’m 58 and I skipped my ‘25 mammogram so I’m playing hooky again, but have had two NP office breast exams at least in between.
If you’re covered for them, get them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BFF never did mammograms (host of reasons that she kept rationalizing.) Well, the kicker was that she had metastatic breast cancer (finally went to a doctor when it became the size of a golf ball and protruded into her armpit.) By then it was too late and she died 18m later. I often wonder what would have happened if she got regular mammograms.
Flip side - my sister gets them regularly, caught her breast cancer early, had it removed, did 10 courses of radiation (no chemo needed), and has been cancer free for 8y.
Figure out your insurance.
I have an acquaintance who got annual mammograms religiously (she was a nurse) but was nonetheless diagnosed with metastatic stage 4 breast cancer. Mammograms are a great screening tool but some forms of cancer are deadly and aggressive regardless of when you find them. Unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:The rise in non-hereditary breast cancer among women in their late 30s and early 40s is astronomical. I personally know so many women with breast cancer right now, all of whom should be fine because they caught it early.
Call while you’re driving or walking your dog. I find it easier to do these admin tasks while I’m also doing something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never had a mammogram or Pap smear. Pushing 50. I know the risks and am fine with my decision.
45. I've had a couple Pap smears but never had a mammogram and similarly am okay with it.
Being militant towards other people about this doesn't make sense to me. It's a personal choice and their business. I don't drink alcohol, smoke cigarettes, or use marijuana, all of which are known to raise cancer risk. But I also don't go around demanding other people do what I do. I assume adults who are drinking and smoking and using pot know their risk and decided they are okay with it. That's their choice.
Of course it's your choice. I just happen to think it's a foolish one.
If you always do the most risk averse and responsible thing in life, 100% of the time no exceptions, good for you.
If you don't and are a human being, then you can be quiet.
Anonymous wrote:You should get a mammogram. I'm only one person but in the last 3 years I've had 3 friends under the age of 45 diagnosed with breast cancer. While the guideline is currently to begin at 40, guidelines are notoriously slow to change especially when it comes to women's health.
Anonymous wrote:My sister skipped hers for 2 years, from age 43-45, when she was going through a hard time personally.
When she finally got one she found she had stage 3b cancer and it’s not clear she’ll make it. If they’d caught it sooner she would have had a much higher chance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never had a mammogram or Pap smear. Pushing 50. I know the risks and am fine with my decision.
45. I've had a couple Pap smears but never had a mammogram and similarly am okay with it.
Being militant towards other people about this doesn't make sense to me. It's a personal choice and their business. I don't drink alcohol, smoke cigarettes, or use marijuana, all of which are known to raise cancer risk. But I also don't go around demanding other people do what I do. I assume adults who are drinking and smoking and using pot know their risk and decided they are okay with it. That's their choice.
I’m not trying to be intrusive, but how do you get to this age and not have a Pap smear? Have you just been a virgin the whole time? Or just use condoms and never had any sort of STD screening?
Because even with the HPV vaccine, not all strains are covered.
And I didn't get the HPV vaccine. I'm not opposed, just too old for them to give it to me.