Posts tagged ‘genetic testing’
A Second Opinion
Well, the frustration with the process of trying to determine whether Andy and I can safely (as safely as we can reasonably know, that is) start trying to conceive continues.
After not hearing back from my doctor’s office a few days after faxing over my test results, I called back and they put my doctor’s nurse on the phone. She said that my doctor didn’t know anything at all about Tay Sachs so had passed my test on to another one of the doctors in the practice, who then basically said he knew nothing about it either.
So the nurse goes on to tell me that they don’t even usually do the Tay Sachs tests at their office unless someone requests it because they don’t know anything about it, and that they usually refer people to a geneticist at Lutheran General Hospital, which fortunately isn’t too far away and pretty easy to get to from my office. She told me that my doctor would look into it and she’d get back to me with the name of the geneticist they recommend.
So I guess it was nice that they were going to look into that for me, but really, I continue to be surprised by the utter and complete ignorance about Tay Sachs on the part of every doctor I’ve encountered and tried to ask about this. Is it because I don’t live in a largely Jewish area and they don’t run into these kinds of questions, or because the specific people I’ve asked just haven’t done their homework on this issue, or because only specialists know anything about it these days?
If that’s the case, I think that’s pretty poor. Someone at the more basic levels, an internist or ob-gyn, should at least know how to help direct a patient to the information they need. Which I guess they’ve done by passing me on to the geneticist, but even getting that name involved asking and waiting and all sorts of uncertainty.
But even more importantly, shouldn’t a regular ob-gyn at least know enough about Tay Sachs and similar genetic diseases to ask a few questions of patients who tell them they’re going to try to conceive? I mean, neither doctor at this practice that I discussed trying to conceive with asked me anything about genetic diseases or talked about certain groups that might be carriers for certain diseases to see if I might need to be tested. I guess these days you just need to be a more educated patient, but I tell you, the information – reliable information – is hard to come by.
The Internet can be a great resource but you have to find the right place to look, which can be tricky, and even then, reading information online doesn’t often answer all your questions. At this point, I feel like I’m seeing a geneticist just to see if I need to see a geneticist! At least the initial consultation is covered by my insurance, or at least that’s what the woman at my insurance company said when I called to ask.
I also tried to find out whether any more extensive testing would be covered, but that’s even trickier. There are all sorts of ways the tests can be coded depending on how and why they’re ordered by the doctor, and there are also all sorts of different tests they can give depending on all sorts of other factors. The insurance gal suggested I get the code of the test from my doctor and then check.
The woman I dealt with at the genetics office was very nice, at least. I called and told her about my results and that I wasn’t sure if I or my husband should get one of the more in-depth tests and she said she’d talk to a genetic counselor and call me back. And she did, but she said that the only tests they do there are the more extensive ones, so that wasn’t of much help. And she said to have them do a test for you you needed to be a patient, so I figured I might as well go do the consult to ask all my questions, and then I can get more tests there if need be.
Then I asked her about the codes, and she gave me a few possible ones to have the insurance company look up, but she also said there are a whole bunch of different ones it could be. So I guess I’ll have to wait until a test is ordered, if it is ordered, to then see if it’s even covered.
The whole thing still brings us back to the question Andy brought up when we talked about it the other day. How much better is knowing 99% for sure that he’s not a carrier (or me, for that matter, if I get retested) than knowing 85% for sure? If there’s still a chance either way, at what point do you just go ahead and say, let’s give it a try? Even with all the testing in the world, there’s never a guarantee your child won’t have Tay Sachs or any frightening number of awful health issues. But at any rate, going to see the geneticist can’t hurt.
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