How to Speak Doctor When You’re Tired of Being Dismissed
In the modern medical machine, treatment isn’t so much tailored as it is templated — dispensed not according to the patient in front of the doctor, but by the sacred scrolls of Treatment Dogma™, a rigid catechism of “best practices” based largely on what’s easiest to justify, bill, or defend in court. You will not be treated as a unique biological entity with a history, comorbidities, and inconveniently strong opinions. No, you will be processed through The Algorithm — and heaven help you if you don’t fit. Watch closely for the holy words of this doctrine: “guidelines,” “standard of care,” “typical case,” and the ever-damning “we don’t usually...” These are not just words — they are incantations, used to ward off clinical nuance and summon the specter of one-size-fits-all medicine. When you hear them, understand: the physician is not speaking to you, but to an imaginary composite patient, age 67, with no cardiac history, no prior treatment, no questions, and ideally, no pulse.
You’ve been diagnosed. You’ve done your homework. You’ve survived the surreal blend of vague reassurances, euphemistic side effects, and upbeat pamphlets written by pharmaceutical copywriters on Prozac. You are, in other words, dangerously informed , and this makes you an immediate threat to the smooth flow of the 11-minute clinical visit.
To survive this brave new world, you’ll need to master a second language: Doctor. Not medical jargon — that’s child’s play. No, we’re talking about the dialect doctors use to dismiss, deflect, and politely tell you that your suffering is inconvenient to the treatment algorithm.
Here’s your crash course in translation, subversion, and selective diplomacy.
🩺 Phrase #1:
Doctor says:
“Your symptoms aren’t typical.”
What it means:
"I don’t have a tidy diagnosis for this, and frankly, I don’t want one.”
How to respond in fluent Doctor:
“That’s interesting. I’d love to see the literature that defines ‘typical’ in hormonally suppressed men over 70 with a Gleason 9 tumor. Can you forward it?”
(They won’t. But now they know you’re armed.)
🩺 Phrase #2:
Doctor says:
“Let’s just monitor for now.”
What it means:
“I don’t want to deal with this until it becomes a catastrophe.”
Fluent counter:
“What’s the clinical threshold that would trigger intervention, and can we document that in the chart today?”
(Translation: “If I die waiting, someone’s getting subpoenaed.”)
🩺 Phrase #3:
Doctor says:
“I’m not sure that’s related.”
What it means:
“I have no idea what’s causing it, and I’d rather not look.”
How to respond:
“Fair enough. Could we run the differential anyway, just to rule out treatable causes? I’d hate to chalk it up to age and miss something fixable.”
(Said with a smile. A very cold, patient smile.)
🩺 Phrase #4:
Doctor says:
“Well, the guidelines don’t recommend it.”
What it means:
“This is above my pay grade and if it’s not in a flowchart, it doesn’t exist.”
How to respond:
“Guidelines are helpful, but given my unique tumor biology and cardiac history, shouldn’t we tailor care to the patient in front of you — not the median man in a Phase III trial from 2011?”
(This will either shut them up or send them to UpToDate in a panic.)
🩺 Phrase #5:
Doctor says:
“This may just be anxiety.”
What it means:
“I’ve run out of interest, and you’re still talking.”
Your fluent reply:
“I agree there’s a psychological toll here, but correlation doesn’t imply causation. I’d prefer we explore physiological explanations first before prescribing meditation.”
(Also acceptable: “I wasn’t anxious until this appointment.”)
🩺 Phrase #6:
Doctor says:
“Let’s give it some time.”
What it means:
“If you’re lucky, it’ll resolve on its own and I won’t have to work.”
Response:
“Time is not on my side. What would the proactive version of this approach look like?”
Bonus follow-up:
“Could we document that we’ve chosen not to investigate further at this time?”
(Watch how quickly they do decide to investigate.)
🩺 Phrase #7:
Doctor says:
“You’re doing really well, all things considered.”
What it means:
“You’re still breathing. Let’s call that a win and move on.”
Translation tactic:
“I appreciate that. Just to clarify, are we measuring ‘well’ by objective markers or just survivability?”
Add extra points for using phrases like “symptom burden,” “functional baseline,” and “risk-benefit calculus.”
🩺 Bonus Survival Phrases to Memorize
“What’s the mechanism of action behind that?”
(They’ll either answer, or realize you’re not a bystander.)
“Is this supported by clinical evidence or anecdotal experience?”
(Translation: “Are we winging this, or do we have data?”)
“If you were in my position, would you want more clarity before waiting?”
(Guilt. Subtle and timeless.)
Final Note: The Tone Matters
Fluent Doctor is not about confrontation. It’s about strategic interrogation with plausible deniability. You’re not arguing — you’re “seeking clarification.” You’re not challenging — you’re “collaborating in care.” You’re not doubting — you’re just terribly curious.
And if all else fails?
Say nothing. Just stare at them for a full five seconds after they speak.
The silence of a well-informed patient is the most terrifying sound in medicine.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
My soon to be ex-doctor sneered when I was asking clarification questions. He never directly answers question and has a scribe as a witness with him. Flinches when I bring my wife with me.
Doesn't sound like a good fit. As a clinician in a different field who has been both loved and fired, I recently moved on from a practitioner because I realized his preferred style of practice and my preferred style of care did not match up well. No fuss, no blame. Of course, it's nice if we have options, which we don't always. Without options, maybe we have to dip from @hanscasteels well?
In these situations I try to keep in mind that part of my job as a patient is to motivate the practitioner to provide his/her best level of care in my situation. That often includes having sympathetic/kindly feelings toward me. I find delivering a written document answering as many questions (of theirs) as I can and highlighting specific questions I have often helps, since one of their besetting challenges is getting through their schedule expeditiously. I usually give it to the nurse when she takes bp and have a copy for myself to keep on track during the encounter.
Too funny- my wife’s cardiologist refers to me as her ‘lawyer’ when I show up at her visit; and she’s my ‘mouthpiece’ when she attends one of mine. But we love the guy and refer to him as ‘Pill Bill’ since handing out prescriptions seems to be the extent of his job.😆
🤣. Your doctor sounds like an AI! I understand Mayo Clinic is spending 5 billion to upgrade “technology”, so helpful for future patients for sure!
Doc Speak. My first 2 urologist were Classic Doc Talker. Nicely rude, same network and building. Since then we, my wife + me, base our oncologist and cancer medical providers based on kindness, humor, and likability.
A tactic I use, spino, is to insist (without having experienced any overt pushback so far) that the pre-visit blood work results be available to me minimally a day or two before the scheduled 3-month/6-month visits, rather than the blood draw and results only on visit day and the results first presented to me at the visit. In this way, I am able to prepare questions about those current results beforehand. (Obviously, this requires my being available for the blood draw in advance, which not all may be able to do.)
That seems a wise route…
Great post thanks for putting this out there
Enjoy all of your posts. Looks like most oncologists are still in the weeds as to what is going on. They just don't know. That's O.K. but just say so please. Most of you have heard of or seen stickers on the doors of womens' rest room stalls.
"Are you being sex trafficed." "help with drugs or other problems" "are you in an abusive relationship" With approprate contact #'s for help. I thought that one posted over urinals in the mens' room of major stadiums " To read :Trouble starting or stopping? Weak stream? Burning sensation" Blood in urine? Pain when urinating? " It might be prostate cancer or inflamation of prostate itself." Please get your PSA checked! Simple, low cost helpful fix it seems to me. These would get men thinking about same without talking with other men. Usually a very difficult subject. Radiation oncologist's reply: "That wouild cause panic" WTF indeed!!! Are so many Oncologists really unable to think outside the box and do the obvious?
Definitely. I can get those results from the labcorp portal, one day after blood draw, and I include it in my writeup with the list of prior blood draws in sequence.