Anonymous wrote:Tell us what your insurance is and where you are and someone can tell you if you’re in network. I’ve always been happy with Washington Radiology - for mammograms, breast MRIs because I have family history and a gene mutation that increases my chances, a needle biopsy for something they found, and a thyroid scan. But I have friends who strongly prefer Sibley for this.
Please do this. My sister canceled her scheduled mammogram because she had just broken her driving foot so getting anywhere was a PITA, and by the time she went back a couple years later she had three tumors and needed a double mastectomy and chemo. My stepmother stopped getting them too early and ended up with breast cancer that was controlled after surgery and chemo and radiation but later came back and killed her.
Anonymous wrote:OP, where did you try to schedule? It seems like a place like Washington Radiology takes pretty much everything - it’s like a cattle call so I get that some people may feel disrespected. And more uncomfortable for some than for others, especially depending on where you are in your cycle - try to not schedule in the last week or two depending on how sensitive your breasts get in luteal phase. But go do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you call and schedule?
OP - because I first need to call my insurance and figure out why they said I was out of network. I hate talking with insurance. It takes forever.
Anonymous wrote:Figure it out.
I had mammograms and then during Covid kept making excuses not to schedule my annual. My mom had BC and her genetic testing was negative, meaning mine would be too, and I used that as an excuse. I mean, with no genetic component what are the chances?
Well, I did end up having BC and went through surgeries, chemo, radiation.
Early detection saves lives. Go.
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.
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.
Anonymous wrote:No one likes getting a mammogram. No one likes dealing with insurance.
But you need to do this. It may save you lots of other exams, procedures, treatments and tons of calls with your insurance. It may save your life.
Start by calling your imaging center. They can help you