The Void Between You and Your Doctor Is Not Staying Empty

Cedar Valley News
April 26, 2026
The Void Between You and
Your Doctor Is Not Staying Empty
By Dr. Aisha Khalid

An oncologist at Stanford named Dr. Ilana Yurkiewicz published an essay earlier this month about a patient she calls Claire. Claire had curable cancer. She is dead.

Yurkiewicz asked her to follow up. But her first available appointment was months away. In the gap, Claire found other sources. Instagram told her to cut sugar to starve the tumor. A podcast recommended ivermectin. Politicians stirred regret over vaccines she had received decades earlier. By the time Claire got back to her physician, she had been in the misinformation ecosystem long enough to lose the window treatment required.

Yurkiewicz writes: I lost her to the void of poor access. Quickly, it was filled.

I want to talk about the void.

A typical primary care physician in this country has 2,500 patients. Studies suggest that adequately caring for them would require 27 hours per day. The math does not work. It has not worked for years. The result is a system where the first available appointment is often weeks or months away, where fifteen minutes is the standard visit length regardless of the complexity of the patient’s case, and where the physician who would catch the issue early is simply not available when early matters.

What fills the void is not nothing. It is Instagram, podcasts, neighbors, politicians, and chatbots. Most of it is wrong. Some of it is dangerous. All of it is available at two in the morning when the patient is frightened and cannot reach anyone with the authority to tell them what is happening in their body.

Claire’s death was not solely the system’s failure. She made choices. She followed advice she should not have followed. But she made those choices inside a gap the system created. The void existed before the misinformation filled it. This is the honest accounting.

I have been a physician in Cedar Valley for twenty years. I have had patients come back after a long absence with something I wish I had caught sooner. I have had patients tell me, carefully, what they had been trying in the meantime. I have had patients I could not help because by the time they reached me, the window had closed. I am not Yurkiewicz’s oncologist. But I know the void she is describing. I have stood at its edge.

I want to give Cedar Valley something practical, because the system won’t fix itself before Monday.

When you cannot get an appointment, and the symptom will not wait, say so. Do not accept the first available slot months away without telling the office what is happening. Call back. Speak to a nurse. Most practices have a nurse line for exactly this purpose. A nurse can triage. A nurse can determine whether you need to be seen sooner. The system has a pathway for urgency. You have to name the urgency to activate it.

If the symptom cannot wait for primary care, go to urgent care. Urgent care is not the emergency room. It is the gap between a symptom and an appointment, and it exists for the situation you are in right now.

When you do get in, tell your physician what you found while you were waiting. All of it. The podcast. The neighbor’s advice. The supplement you ordered. Your physician cannot help what she does not know. The conversation is not easier if you hide what you tried. It is harder because she is working with incomplete information, and so are you.

Yurkiewicz closes her essay with something worth repeating. Amid the noise Claire encountered, ChatGPT said something accurate, if impractical: you should see your doctor. The problem was not the advice. The problem was the door was not open when she needed it.

Cedar Valley cannot fix the national system. But Cedar Valley can do this: when something feels wrong, name it to someone with the authority to assess it. Do not wait for the void to fill itself.

If you have been putting off a call to your physician because you could not get an appointment, or if you have been sitting with a symptom and a question you have not asked out loud, you are not alone in Cedar Valley. The Facebook group is where the conversation continues. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, Dr. Ilana Yurkiewicz and her essay in STAT News are real. Claire is a pseudonym used by Dr. Yurkiewicz to protect her patient’s identity.

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