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The Balancing Act – Laryngectomy Patient Journey

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    [MUSIC]
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    >> Our voice, naturally,
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    a large part of
    our identity.
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    It's who we are.
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    But imagine a
    world in which
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    your ability to
    communicate is
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    challenged after
    you've undergone
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    a surgery called
    Laryngectomy.
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    Well, the good
    news is, thanks to
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    advances in modern
    technology,
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    there are a number of ways
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    to help you get
    your voice back.
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    Joining us with Insight is
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    Meaghan Kane-Benjamin
    of Atos Medical.
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    And later on, you're gonna
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    meet a man who can now
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    chat it up again with
    the best of them.
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    Good morning, Meaghan.
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    >> Good morning.
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    >> Thanks for being here.
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    >> Thanks for having me.
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    >> Before we talk
    about laryngectomy,
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    I think about the voice.
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    I need my voice
    to do my job,
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    and I take it for granted.
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    >> You probably only
    notice your voice when
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    you lose it and you
    can't do your job.
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    It's very
    inconvenient when
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    you don't have a voice.
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    >> And that's, of
    course, is laryngitis.
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    But now let's talk more
    about laryngectomy.
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    What is that?
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    >> Laryngectomy
    is the removal
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    of the larynx
    or vocal cords.
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    It's located in your neck.
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    If you put your
    hand up here,
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    you can feel the
    vibration when you talk.
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    >> Let me see
    for a second.
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    Absolutely.
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    >> And then when
    you swallow,
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    you feel the larynx move.
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    The primary
    function of the
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    larynx is actually to
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    protect the
    airway from food
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    and liquid going
    down the wrong pipe.
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    Secondary is really to
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    produce sound, which
    is your voice.
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    >> Now, this may seem
    like a silly question,
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    but can we speak without
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    larynx or a voice box?
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    >> You can speak
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    without larynx
    or a voice box.
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    We just need to find
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    an alternative
    sound source,
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    which is oftentimes
    the esophagus.
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    >> So when I think
    of laryngectomy,
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    I don't know if you
    think about this,
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    but I think about
    those anti-smoking ads
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    that we see. You
    know which ones?
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    >> Yes.
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    >> They're very
    compelling.
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    >> They're so
    compelling because
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    the objective is to get
    people not to smoke.
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    But most of the 3,500 new
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    laryngectomies each
    year that have
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    surgery go on to live
    very fulfilling lives.
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    >> So there is life
    after laryngectomy?
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    >> Absolutely.
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    >> Now, the great
    news is there is
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    technology that's helping
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    people get their
    voice back.
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    >> Absolutely,
    and it's this.
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    >> Just that?
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    >> Just that. It's called
    a voice prosthesis.
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    There's a surgical opening
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    between the trachea
    and the esophagus,
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    and this voice prosthesis
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    gets placed
    just like this.
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    And so one part sits
    in the esophagus,
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    one part in the trachea,
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    and when the patient
    goes to talk,
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    they cover the stoma
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    that they're
    breathing through.
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    It shuns the air through
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    here and causes the
    esophagus to vibrate.
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    And the beauty of
    it is that there is
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    a small valve on
    the backside,
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    so when the patient is
    drinking and eating,
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    the food and liquid
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    doesn't flow back
    into the lungs.
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    >> Fascinating.
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    Now, tell me what
    this is here.
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    >> So this is amazing.
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    This is called
    the flexi voice.
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    This is placed on the
    outside of the stoma,
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    and it's a pressure
    sensitive membrane
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    so that the
    patient can talk
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    without using their
    hands to cover.
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    >> Oh, my goodness.
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    >> Which is basically what
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    they were doing before
    they had surgery.
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    And then we have HMEs,
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    a heat moisture exchanger.
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    Just in a nutshell,
    this is your new nose.
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    This is what you
    put on to warm,
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    humidify the air, which is
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    very important to the
    health of your lungs.
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    And there's one
    for the day,
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    and there's also one
    for the evening.
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    >> Now, I know we
    have a clip with
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    some patients who are
    using this technology.
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    >> Oh, great.
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    >> I want to hear what
    they have to say, so
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    let's take a
    look real quick.
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    >> I'm the luckiest
    man in the world.
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    I had cancer and
    lost my voice.
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    I've now got a bike.
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    And when people they see
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    me months ago
    with the manual,
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    haven't seen me
    for a while,
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    and they see me
    talking to them now,
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    they say, it's
    just like having
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    a new bike pill,
    and it's amazing.
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    >> Every day, me and
    my wife go for a walk.
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    And when we walk we talk.
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    To use the hand-free
    speaking valve
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    gives me the
    possibility to
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    live a very active life.
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    Hello, my name is
    Tora [inaudible].
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    I have a voice.
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    >> Truly remarkable and
    just changing lives.
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    >> It's amazing.
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    >> Amazing also is
    our next guest.
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    So stay right there
    because we're going
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    to take a quick break
    and when we come back,
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    we're gonna meet a man
    who is now talking up
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    a storm thanks to this
    great technology.
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    We'll do that next.
    Before the break,
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    we were discussing
    laryngectomy,
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    a surgery in which
    the voice box,
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    the larynx is taken out.
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    It's usually performed in
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    advanced stages of cancer.
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    Well, joining me
    once again is
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    Meaghan Kane-Benjamin,
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    and also now is joining me
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    is Henry Childress.
    Good morning, Henry.
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    >> Good morning.
    Thanks for having me.
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    >> No, thank you so much
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    for being here and for
    sharing your story.
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    Tell me what happened.
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    >> We had a New Year's
    Eve party in my house,
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    and the next morning,
    I woke up hoarse.
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    >> Which happens
    to many people.
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    >> Especially after
    New Year's Eve party.
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    >> Of course, you were
    having a lot of fun.
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    >> So I started going to
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    the doctor and
    getting antibiotics,
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    and my wife finally told
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    me we need to see
    a specialist.
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    >> You weren't
    getting better?
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    >> I wasn't
    getting better.
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    So I went to
    one specialist,
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    and he found a nodule
    on my vocal cords.
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    And he's the one that
    found that I had
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    stage 4 tumor on
    my vocal cords.
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    >> So what were
    your options?
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    >> We started
    out with chemo.
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    And we had chemo
    for two rounds.
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    And the second round,
    I had a bad reaction.
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    And so they pulled me
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    off of it and sent me back
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    down to the
    doctor's office,
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    and he put the tube
    back down to me
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    and the tumor was growing.
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    So he rushed me
    into surgery
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    and cut the tumor off.
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    And then I got
    a [inaudible]
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    right there so I
    could breathe.
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    >> And then you
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    realized you had to
    have a laryngectomy?
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    >> When I could not
    having talked to my wife
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    and there was two options.
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    I could not have
    a laryngectomy.
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    Maybe live six months,
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    two months or have
    a laryngectomy.
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    And that was a decision
    we had to make.
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    >> This is very
    common, Meaghan,
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    where you're misdiagnosed,
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    time passes, and then
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    maybe something like
    this can happen?
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    >> Yes, because there's
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    so many causes
    of hoarseness,
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    and laryngeal cancer
    is relatively rare,
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    so it's not the
    first thing.
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    >> Now, Henry,
    I was reading
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    here you've been
    married for 36 years.
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    Congratulations.
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    Two children and
    three grandchildren.
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    >> And fourth one
    in about a week.
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    >> Oh, well,
    congratulations there.
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    So when you underwent
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    the laryngectomy,
    how was your life?
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    What were you doing?
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    How did it change
    your life?
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    It must have been
    very difficult.
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    I can only imagine.
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    >> Very difficult.
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    >> So let's move on.
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    So you got the technology,
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    and then that helped
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    all that bad
    stuff go away.
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    So let's talk about
    the positive stuff.
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    How did this technology
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    then change your life?
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    >> Making me back to a
    person I was before.
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    >> What were you
    able to start doing?
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    >> Playing with
    my grandkids
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    without talking to them.
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    I'm trying to write and
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    they didn't know
    what I was saying.
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    >> Community
    support really
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    important in this
    situation, advocacy?
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    >> There's such a
    small number of
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    people that get a total
    laryngectomy every
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    year that they
    need access to
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    other people
    that have gone
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    through it and
    to education.
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    Having people
    like Henry doing
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    things like this helps
    raise awareness.
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    And then there's
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    so many events
    and activities.
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    There are local
    support groups,
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    there's national things,
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    and I think that
    really helps with
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    the understanding of what
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    the future could hold.
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    >> That's why I
    give back now.
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    I meet with patients
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    before they have
    the surgeries.
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    I like help
    patients to people.
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    >> So Henry, I
    want you to use
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    your beautiful voice
    and tell anyone out
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    there who is
    hesitant about
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    getting this surgery,
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    what would you tell them?
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    >> First of all,
    I would tell
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    them if you don't
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    get to answer
    from one doctor,
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    go to another doctor
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    until you get the
    right answer.
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    And then talk with
    your doctor if
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    they're telling
    you that you
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    need a laryngectomy,
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    see if they got a patient
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    like me that you
    can talk to.
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    That made all
    the difference
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    in the world for me.
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    >> Changed your life.
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    >> Changed my life.
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    >> And for more information
    on how to reclaim
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    your voice, visit
    atosmedical.us.
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    That's
    atosmedical.us or go
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    to our website
    TheBalancingAct.com.
Title:
The Balancing Act – Laryngectomy Patient Journey
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
08:30

English subtitles

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