I’ve made no secret of the fact that I believe we need a paradigm shift in the way we (the Neuroendocrine Cancer community) spread external awareness of this less common type of cancer. I think everyone agrees we need a lot more public awareness of Neuroendocrine Cancer and also that we need some high-profile ‘ambassadors’ (preferably themselves patients) in order to help promote our cause. Yes, money is useful too but in a ‘chicken and egg’ sense, we need a compelling case to attract the funds. We need new audiences outside the ‘bubble’ I think we appear to be trapped inside. The zebra posse sharing zebra pictures between each other is not efficient awareness.
Here’s my beef. If you speak to any primary or secondary care doctor, you’ll find they are very well aware of the conundrum when faced with a patient who presents with vague and odd symptoms and negative tests (they see this with many diseases, Neuroendocrine Neoplasms are not so special in this regard). Almost all will say they don’t need reminding that it might be an oddity, and that it is difficult to diagnose. They will definitely accept that some conditions are more difficult to diagnose than others and if you think about the fact that there are over 200 different types of cancer and literally thousands of conditions out there, you can see they have a really difficult job.
Let’s be realistic, very few people are going to be diagnosed with Neuroendocrine Cancer at their very first visit to a doctor. The same could be said for many cancers and many other illnesses. Many conditions are difficult to diagnose, and many are misdiagnosed for other things – yes this happens with Neuroendocrine Cancer too. Neuroendocrine Cancer is not as special in these areas as some people make out. Whilst we’re on that subject, please don’t quote patient surveys to me, they are also fundamentally flawed both in terms of numbers of participants and the source of the participants. It amazes me that the Neuroendocrine Cancer community uses this flawed (and outdated) information annually including alongside animal antics which dilutes what limited value they already have.
I also know that many people (including medical staff and patients) are both confused and incredulous at the Neuroendocrine Cancer community’s failure to ditch this out-of-date and single-issue awareness message. Some avoid the use of these animal gimmicks and then lapse their real beliefs on 10 Nov just to appear to fit in. However, that’s rather transparent and so people see right through it, like me they want these progressive organisations to stick to their principles. They tell me they don’t like the zebra model but then say a different thing to Zebra HQ and then join in with the ‘zebrafest’ on 10th November.
To quote one famous Neuroendocrine Cancer Specialist “….zebras …. we’re beyond that now”
We need our awareness to cover the whole spectrum of being diagnosed and then living with Neuroendocrine Cancer. We share so many issues with many cancer patients in the challenges of living with a long-term condition. This is not special, not unique, and it certainly isn’t a rare occurrence. Key facts continually missed and continually ignored by the ‘zebra posse’ (perhaps intentionally), is that this disease of ours is no longer rare and diagnosis is improving, both of which are now well documented. The ‘zebra posse’ will ensure that quite ridiculous pictures of zebras, zebra-patterned clothing, and jewelry all take precedence over genuine patient concerns on Facebook forums, i.e. it is hindering proper support for Neuroendocrine Cancer patients who are suffering because of this infatuation.
As one well known Neuroendocrine Cancer patient said, “unfortunately the community has become too cute with the icon”
He’s right, it is really holding us back. It’s a PR disaster.
I’m sure that earlier access to diagnostic testing (scanning in particular) will lead to earlier diagnosis, in fact, access to better scans is cited in the lasts SEER NET report as a factor resulting in increased incidence rates. That’s a resource/process issue rather than just a training/knowledge one. We need to work with doctors, not shoot them down for not knowing every minute fact about medicine. Neuroendocrine Cancer is much more likely to be diagnosed at secondary care and we should be equally or even more focused at that level.
If your Doctors don’t suspect something, they won’t detect anything is a more practical and realistic phrase than the impossible and impractical one in current use by our community. Additionally, to suggest that NETs always present with years of vague symptoms and require several visits to a physician before a proper diagnosis is simply not true and is a myth. To suggest that an international patient survey of 5000 accurately represents the experience of hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of NET patients out there is way off beam, particularly when the source of the survey patient cohort is taken from those affected most, those with the biggest issues. Big Facebook forums do not represent the average experience of a NET patient.
Finally, I think the patient has a big part to play in diagnosis. Thanks to the internet and the stellar rise of social media, many patients are now much savvier and are presenting to doctors and specialists with lists of their symptoms and a diary. Some will even have already compiled a list of questions to ask and have their own suggestions about what might be wrong with them. I see undiagnosed patients every day on my social media very clued up, thanks to the rise of the online world, and I guarantee you they are (indirectly) educating their first-line medical staff when they reel off NET facts. Add in better diagnostic testing and greater access to it (including via primary care), then I think there are positive times ahead for the earlier diagnosis of Neuroendocrine Cancer. You might say it’s a bit of a dark horse.
To summarise ….. The first word of this post is “Opinion” but it is a pretty strong opinion as you would have gathered from the flow of the text. Everyone does indeed have a story and you only tend to hear the bad stories on NET patient forums. Additionally, newspapers love a bad story – they never print “cancer patient quickly diagnosed and treated for cancer – the end”. It’s a bit like in NET world, where the worst cases will be the majority constituents of any forum because they are looking for help and support. The biggest US forum has around 4000-5000 people but there are over 200,000 people living with Neuroendocrine Cancer in USA (i.e. not rare) and I can almost guarantee those figures don’t include many Neuroendocrine Carcinomas). There’s a similar quota in UK. I really believe the bad experiences you regularly see on Neuroendocrine Cancer patient forums are those who have issues, and this sends out an incorrect message to many. Unfortunately, most Neuroendocrine Cancer patient surveys are taken from these patients, so the statistics are totally skewed, presenting a false picture of reality. That’s not to say we ignore this section of the community, but we owe them a much better campaigning tool than the now outdated, unfashionable, and very inward-looking animal analogy.
Let’s move into the 21st century and get on with that.
Note: Since making my views clear, some organisations and individuals have chosen to “cancel” me …… yes, the cancel culture extends to cancer patient advocacy. And even patients who these organisations exist to support, can be cancelled – a modern scourge. However, this has backfired as I have been (and still am) accelerating my vocal and written reach and appear to be bigger than most on social media. Read between the lines if guilty.