Cancer Center.com has a commercial out. In it a guy claims he was waiting in the doctors office when he says “A big burly doctor comes in and says to me ’ What are you smiling at? you have cancer, you got six months to live’ then he turns and walks away.”
Come on cancer center.com, I think you’re pulling my leg.
I also love the added touch “He’s a big burly doctor man.” I mean, what’s that got to do with anything?
I’m sure that’s what it FEELS like to the patient.
Or it could be taken out of context. Perhaps the big burly doctor said
Doc) Sorry to tell you this but you have cancer.
Man) Oh no
Doc) Yes and with this type of cancer is almost always fatal
Man) How can I have cancer, I feel fine?
Doc) Now you feel fine, but it’s unusual to live more than six months
Man) Aw come on you’re kidding me
Doc) No I’'m not
Man) You got to be
Doc) We need to start treatment
Man) Why you said I’d die
Doc) There’s always a slim chance
Man) Ah forget it I think I’m fine, I don’t want no chemo
[and this continues for ten minutes] when the doctor says
Doc) Stop laughing you only got six months to live.
Now the man with cancer probably forgot all the parts in the middle.
Perhaps the doctor felt walking away would shock this man into taking it seriously.
I haven’t seen that one yet, but my favorite line from an earlier commercial for Cancer Treatment Center is when one of their doctors tells a female patient “Jane*, we looked and we couldn’t find an expiration date stamped on you.”
I wasn’t aware that this was a side effect of cancer…
*not her real name, because I haven’t seen it in a while.
I know I could look but I won’t, but I am curious as to what the porn at ‘bigburlydoctordotcom’ is like.
Do they only have videos or do they have text stories as well?
No doctor on the planet would say that? I don’t buy it. A doctor in my state (Terry Bennett) got sued for telling his patient to lose weight because “men don’t like fat women,” so obviously there are doctors severely lacking in bedside manner.
I got told to my face that i was lazy and just sitting on my ass popping candy all day, which explained the 150 lb weight gain in 3 years … didnt explain the dry scaley skin or falling out hair, or my body temp being 94 fahrenheit or my fingernails delaminating … and there was nothing medically wrong with me. Of course it took me almost 10 years for me to force the navy to put me into the diabetic control program…and they never did satisfactorily explain my thyroid symptopms, and they totally missed the hyperparathyroidism for who knows how many years.
I got to where I basically waited until my condition was about ready to put me into the ER before bothering to make a basic appointment. Too may fucking years of being treated like a hypochondriac like all the other female dependants.
I have a real doc now … and am doing a hell of a lot better. Of course now we are working on repairing all the damage the navy negligence did.
what’s odd is that the guy in the ad looks big and burly himself, doesn’t he? it’s like a small, skinny, nerdy guy in glasses saying “this little nerdy doctor comes in and tells me i have six months to live…”
i agree with earlier post – there must have been something from that initial consultation with Dr. Burly that he left out.
I am with you on that. Why would the size of a doctor have anything to do with it,it makes it sound phoney to me!
I know of a friends daughter who went to the Cancer Center in Zion, Il. She didn’t live any longer than what another doctor had figured, but if it helped her relax about her condition it wasn’t bad. I think most of their people in the ad are actors, I could be wrong, but anything that gives someone hope isn’t too bad.
If you believe alternative medicine/scam practitioners, physicians are always telling patients “You’ve got a year/six months/a few days to live/don’t buy any long-playing records*”, only to have the patients use some miracle remedy the doc scoffed at and live another thirty years.
I won’t say that no physician in history has ever told a patient “You’ve got six months to live”, but what typically happens is that a physician will discuss the average life expectancy for people having a particular condition, expectations with or without treatment etc. People generally want to know these things so they can make plans.
For example, I take part in oncology conferences on a regular basis, where a great variety of cases and situations are discussed, and I’ve never heard anyone flat-out state that a particular patient has only X months to live. It would be foolish and unprofessional.
*this line would obviously need updating. Maybe “don’t start downloading any really long digital files.” Doesn’t have the same ring to it, though.