Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Single Mindedness

A couple of weeks ago, I took my friend who is fighting breast cancer to her weekly chemo appointment.  We were at the hospital for 5-6 hours, and I was able to stay with her for about half of that time.  I brought a book with me to pass the remainder of the time.  I had not realized how sitting in the waiting room would affect me.  It was very emotional, partly because my friend is fighting cancer of course, but also the number of people who came through the waiting room was overwhelming.  Tears came to my eyes multiple times, but when an older man came in for treatment and was turned away because they were TOO FULL, I almost lost it and had to leave the room to collect myself.
I brought my things and tried to head outside to get some fresh air, but this managed care hospital is like a four-story maze, and I couldn't find the exit.  Instead, I found the cafeteria; figuring an icy cold caffeinated Coke would take the edge off.  I, however, was disappointed when I got to the self-serve soda machine and realized they didn't have Coke.  They had Diet Coke, Diet Pepsi, Diet Sprite, Tab (I didn't even think they made Tab anymore), and various caffeine-free versions of the above mentioned.  I walked away from the machine to the fridge holding bottles of cold drinks thinking I'd find a regular Coke in there.  No such luck.  I do not care for the taste of the diet soda products.  There's something about the sugar substitute that just tastes terrible to me.  So I ditched my icy soda plan and grabbed a cold bottle of water instead.  
Upon taking it to the cashier I asked her about the lack of regular Coke.  She chuckled, "Yes, they have us all on a diet here.  There are only diet sodas and fruit juice."  I didn't think anything about it as this managed care organization is known for its overall health PR.  I found a seat in the cafeteria, opened my bottle and read my book happy to not be breaking down every time someone walked into the room.  But while thinking about the concept of only having diet sodas in the cafeteria because they are supposedly healthier than the regular started to bother me.  I completely get that soda is not good for you, and I have no problem with a business, especially one in the health business, not to sell it.  But if we are looking at health on a wider scale like this business supposedly does,  how can one justify diet soda with all its fake sugar and chemicals as a healthy alternative.  Sure, there are less calories in it, but let's be honest, it's not any better for you.  I'd have more respect for their healthy stance if they kept all sodas out of their hospital rather than deciding one poor health option was less bad for you than another.

8 comments:

  1. Sorry about your friend.

    I find hospitals rather grim places.

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    1. Yep, they are. We're not usually there for happy reasons, that's for sure. Today was her last round of chemo, so I'm glad about that.

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    2. Well yes, but they don't have to out of their way to make things as utilitarian as possible. It isn't just the kids wards that need a little bit of pop to them. Maybe it's just me but seeing a clown, or even a stand-up comedian to get a laugh out of people could only be good.

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    3. Yah for sure. They could do more. I don't know about clowns :) but definitely something to make it less depressing. I think the part that made it hard, for me, is the sheer number of people with cancer who came through those doors. We know it's a lot, but it was that in-your-face number that saddened me. They do this every week. Many of them knew each other from the weekly treatments. At a regular doctor or even hospital it could be anything from a splinter to a broken bone, the flu, minor or major surgery. In oncology the reason for being there is pretty much only one. It's depressing and scary, and I was just there for moral support. Worse than the waiting room was the room where all the patients are hooked up to their treatments in a circle, staring at each other with tubes and machines. They could do a better job of making that more pleasant as well. Of all people to be in this drab place. How about making it a happy place, at least on aesthetically.

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  2. I guess everyone has an opinion (and we know what they say about that...), but it's mine that having the occasional soda with real sugar in it is far healthier than drinking the diet stuff. I'm like you - most all of the substitutes leave a bad taste in my mouth. In general, I'm a water drinker, but I do like the occasional real Coke. (or root beer!)

    Yay for your friend completing her chemo!

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    1. Yes, definitely yay! And, as of now, she's in line for a lumpectomy as opposed to the originally thought double-mastectomy. Which is great news as well. :)
      I agree. Neither are good for you, so to imply one is better is just silly.

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  3. Yes that is all a bit ironic about the diet vs "real" drinks. I guess the rationale is the carolies. But, as you point out, it's still really bad stuff. I remember going w my mother for chemo a couple times. It's extremely sobering to be in a room like that, knowing so many of those people are dying.

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    1. Very sobering. There has been a lot of questioning about my own mortality these last few months.

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