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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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Yes
Do you know how a cyst feels, and, if you know what you're looking for, you can't miss it? I don't know what I'm looking for, though. I check if everything seems ok, but I have no idea what I should be expecting. He does.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:17, 1 reply, 15 years ago)
If you found something, you *would* know
And there's a very strong possibility that the doctor - any specialist you care to mention - wouldn't know what it was until further tests were done.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:21, Reply)
This^^
You're looking for anything which is different form "normal", and only you are going to know what normal is by doing regular checks yourself.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:25, Reply)
And
I want someone who know about it to re-check that I'm doing it right. I might have missed a spot, or just thought that doesn't feel too bad.

Most of the cancers in Spain are found by the Gyn. Women usually don't do the checks themselves, this way you make sure they get checked at least once a year.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:35, Reply)
But you should be checking yourself more than once a year
Every month or two, because if their is a tumor, you could be dead within a year.

And if you're not sure how to do it, doctors and nurses can show you how and there is so much information available about this.

But going to see a doctor to have your tits fondled is neither cost efficient, nor a good way of picking up potential problems.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:41, Reply)
It's a good way of picking problems
it's how most of them are found in Spain. Women a lot of times miss the cysts. Or think it's just an ingrowing hair or some fat. It's good to have a second opinion. And it takes him 5min to do it.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:47, Reply)
No, it is not a good way of identifiying problems, I just said, once a year is too infrequent to be a useful screen
If you find something you are concerned about, you go and see your GP who may examine you, or refer you to a specialist. But as I just said, you're looking for changes and you are going to be the best person to know if something has changed.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:50, Reply)
It's not bad
It's a way to make sure women get a check at least once per year. We have to do it every month, yes, but most don't do it. And it's a good way to get reassurance that you're doing it right and that things are still ok.

Again, they pick most of them. Very few women find them themselves.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:55, Reply)
You do realise that a woman in this country
is perfectly capable of going to see a GUI clinic for a general check up once a year if she wants, she just has to arrange an appointment herself, hardly a massive inconvenience.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:59, Reply)
No, I wasn't aware of that
And I think that's very good, specially if you don't need your GP first to tell you that you can go. In that case, I retract myself about the breast cancer check. I still think the other things are wrong, but well... And they could give us some info about that GUI thing too, when we have the smear test at least.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 17:02, Reply)
You might be interested in this, actually
Spain's mortality for breast cancer is about 20/100,000 as opposed to 27/100,000 in the UK. That's enough of a difference to maybe be significant, except that breast cancer is much lower in southern european countries than northern ones regardless of heathcare systems (the Dutch and the Danes have rates in the 40/100,000 for instance, the only nothern exception is Norway). So it's much more likely to be diet and climate and genetic factors than a man motorboating you once a year. But it's interesting, for sure.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 17:14, Reply)
I'm sure the diet and stress play a big game there
I'm pretty sure most of those cancers were diagnosed by gyns.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 17:18, Reply)
i'm sure they were
I'm just making the point that self-diagnosis is obviously at least as good or we'd have a brutally higher mortality rate.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 17:22, Reply)
Also
if GPs or Obs/Gyn guys here started doing manual breast examns annually then the sexual harassment panda would be all over them like they were bamboo.

I'm intrigued that a gynaecologist has convinced people he knows about breast cancer, though. That's some top fibbing work
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:26, Reply)
They get better trainning than here
for what you say.

And here, for everything the Doc has to do to you, there's a female nurse to check everythings fine. And he asks you everytime he's going to touch you if it's ok (which I find a bit irritating, but I understand)
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:33, Reply)
gynaecology's still got bugger all to do with cancer though
they'd be no better at spotting a tumour than your average car mechanic.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:36, Reply)
They are
You don't know what you're saying. They do find most of the tumours in breasts in Spain. Women fail to feel them sometimes, or just can't be bothered to do the check themselves.

He's been told as well as an oncologist, how to check for them. And not only breast, but ovaries and uterus cancers or cysts, using ultrasound. That's how most of them are found too, on your annual visit to the gynecologist. An early diagnose is the most important thing to fight cancer.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 16:49, Reply)
OK, but
if he's specialising in both gynaecology AND oncology he's going to be no better than average at both. There's a reason for extreme specialism in the medical profession.

Ovarian and uterus and cervical cancers are absolutely picked up in your biannual screen here too. But not by the bloke that does the smear, by the lab it's sent to, which is a specialist oncology lab. I'm sure that's same in Spain.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 17:03, Reply)
You see?
I don't know what that biannual screen is. I only get a smear test every 5 years here.

The Gyn specializes on women's reproductive system, and that includes spotting the beginning of a cancer or a cyst. Maybe that's why his degree takes 7 years + 3 of training at the hospital.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 17:17, Reply)
that's odd
every woman I've ever lived with has had it every 2 years. Bi-annual. sorry for confusing words.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 17:23, Reply)

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