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236: What Happens When a Patient Sees Their Cancer for the First Time | Podcast with Michele Mitchell

Episode 236 Published 1 month, 1 week ago
Description

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What if the most frightening part of a pathology report is not the word cancer, but the silence that follows?

In this episode of the Digital Pathology Podcast, Dr. Aleksandra Zuraw talks with Michele Mitchell—breast cancer survivor, caregiver, national patient advocate, and longtime volunteer across Michigan Medicine, ASCP, the Digital Pathology Association, and MyPathologyReport.ca—about what happened when she saw her own cancer slide years after treatment. That moment changed how she understood her disease, her risk, and her role as a patient advocate.

This is not just a patient story. It is a digital pathology implementation story.

The episode looks at how digital pathology removes practical barriers to sharing slides, why pathology clinics matter, and what becomes possible when pathologists move from being hidden in the background to becoming direct contributors to patient understanding. Michelle and Dr. Aleks talk through the communication gap around pathology reports, the emotional cost of delayed explanation, and the real-world workflow of pathology clinic visits built to help patients review their slides with the pathologist who made the diagnosis.

They also discuss what the 21st Century Cures Act changed for patients, why immediate access to reports without interpretation can still create fear, and how pathology clinics can bridge the gap between raw data and real understanding. The conversation gets practical too: how patients can request a pathology clinic visit, what virtual pathology consults can look like, how billing and workflow concerns are already being addressed, and why the infrastructure question is smaller than many people assume.

If you work in digital pathology, pathology informatics, patient communication, or implementation, this episode is a reminder that visibility is not extra. It is part of the value proposition. And for pathologists who worry this is too far outside the traditional role, the episode offers a grounded counterpoint: the workflows, templates, billing structures, and virtual options already exist.

Highlights

  • 00:00 – Why pathology needs to become more patient-centered
    Michele frames the core problem clearly: what often scares patients is not only cancer, but the silence around the diagnosis. 
  • 00:34 – How digital pathology changes the patient experience
    Digital slides make it possible for patients to see their diagnosis, compare normal and abnormal tissue, and ask better questions. 
  • 11:13 – What happened when Michele saw her cancer for the first time
    More than a decade after treatment, seeing her own slide changed how she understood her grade, her risk, and her daily health decisions. 
  • 16:19 – Why visual pathology can change adherence and lifestyle
    Michele explains how the image-based explanation became a practical turning point, not just an emotional one. 
  • 20:43 – The case for direct pathologist-patient communication
    The episode reviews why this can improve clarity, treatment understanding, clinic efficiency, and even professional satisfaction for pathologists. 
  • 38:40 – What a pathology clinic actually looks like
    From preparation and consent to slide review, plain language, empathy, and follow-up, the workflow is much more concrete than many people assume. 
  • 45:35 – ASCP’s certification workshop for pathology clinics
    Michele describes the national effort to make pathology clinics reproducible, scalable, and easier to implement. 
  • 49:32 – What the 21st Century Cures Act changed
    Patients now get near real-time access to reports, but that access still needs interpretation, context, and support. 
  • 01:03:23 – Pushback, logistics, and why the b
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