This young, single mother of three first noticed the small bump on her upper arm, beneath the surface of the skin, about a year ago. The demands of single parenthood and her low-paying/no-insurance-providing job had kept her out of medical care. When asked to describe the size of the initially noticed lesion, she drew a circle 4mm in diameter. When newFNP measured the mass in clinic, it was 12.5 cm by 15 cm.
It was firm. Not firm firm, but softly firm and disturbingly firm. Soft tissue sarcoma firm. Oh shit firm.
NewFNP saw and felt the mass and instantly flashed back to her recent patient with two huge malignant masses. She wrote the urgent referrals to her county system, but she knows that this young woman will need to go through the emergency department in order to get the CT and biopsy that she needs.
NewFNP is sick of this. She is deeply frustrated by having nowhere to turn for her patients who need more care than newFNP's clinic provides. She is frustrated that her major metropolitan area's community clinic association has so few resources for the community clinics. And she is frustrated that she is so busy on a day to day basis that she cannot create her own backroads system of referrals.
Our patients wait. They wait until their symptoms are unbearable. They wait until they borrow someone's glucose monitor and see "HI" and then they wait some more before they come in, wondering if their 30-pound weight loss and dry mouth and frequent trips to the john could be caused by diabetes. They wait until their likely rhabdomyosarcoma is visible from across the room.
In writing this, newFNP realizes that this is only half true. There are the other group of patients who present for every URI, hangnail, bruise and stomach ache that they experience. NewFNP sort of wishes that these worried well would come in less and the very needy new diabetics and cancer patients and HIV/AIDS patients would come in sooner -- when newFNP and her colleagues could actually help them.