Published
This has to be the most common comment I get when I tell people that I am a pediatric nurse and that my primary population is pediatric oncology.
Yesterday I went hiking with a group of people I'd never met before, so naturally I got this from every person. One of these people was a social worker in the substance abuse field... I'd say the same thing back to him. I'll take kids with cancer over drunk adults any day.
NotReady4PrimeTime, RN
5 Articles; 7,358 Posts
My uncle, who is now in his early 70s, was told in the spring for the 5th time that he has cancer. He has had two relapses of oral cancer requiring radical surgery, prostate cancer and now his oral cancer has metastasized to his lungs. (They found it when they were screening him for a hip replacement.) He has refused treatment this time and I'm so proud of him. They gave him abut 6 months; so far he's still hanging in there. He and my aunt have just moved into a life-lease building where she'll be looked after once he's gone. But he isn't a typical adult patient at all. I had a PICU patient who had undergone the same surgical procedure he'd had for his last relapse right around the same time and done by the same surgical team. When the resident came by to see my patient I mentioned that I had a family member who'd had the same surgery and the resident's face lit up. "Oh, you must be talking about Mr. R! He's such a lovely man." When I asked if he'd met my aunt, his voice sounded strangled... "Um. Yes." I winked at him and told him it was okay, we all know she's crazy... Now THAT's one adult I'd never want to have as a patient!