Hard Medicine
All of life, in a way, is decision-making with a deadline — paired with deep uncertainty about that deadline. For people living with stage IV cancer, both the deadline and its uncertainty are radically heightened. Cancer is one word, but it’s not one disease. Thanks to targeted therapies and evolving treatments, some people live for years with metastatic illness. They must make ongoing choices about work, relationships, and meaning, without knowing how many days they have or what those days will look like. In this episode of Hard Medicine, Dr. Yurkiewicz sits down with Dr. Bryant Lin, a primary care physician and clinical professor who was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer just shy of his 50th birthday. How did he decide what to continue and what to let go? How much detail about prognosis did he seek? Does time itself pass differently when you know there’s less of it? 0:06 Opening Monologue: Living with Compressed Time 1:43 Life Before Cancer 4:01 Lung Cancer in Non-Smoking Asians 8:09 First Symptoms and Getting Diagnosed 18:27 How Much Did You Want to Know About Prognosis? 22:14 Making Decisions Under Uncertainty 27:42 Finding Joy and Passing Time 38:25 Choosing Hospice or Clinical Trials 41:29 Insurance Hell 50:20 “Sunshine” — What Makes a Good Life with Stage IV Cancer? Get full access to Hard Medicine at ilanayurkiewiczmd.substack.com/subscribe [https://ilanayurkiewiczmd.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
6 episodios
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