In my marriage it is my wife who doesn't ever want to go to the doctor. She grew up in a broken home (in more ways than one) with no insurance at any time, so unless they were bleeding or comatose they never went to a doctor because they are all just greedy money-grubbers (her dad's words, but an attitude he passed on to his kids). This has been reinforced in her when we have gone in for some relatively minor issues and the doctors basically did nothing, although I always try to tell her that at least they ruled out anything serious. That just does not fly with her.
I have no issues with doctors, and I am glad about it. I was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, bone cancer, in an isolated tumor in my upper chest and shoulder growing into my spinal column. My oncologist gave me less than 15% chance of beating the cancer. The tumor was actually pressing against the sheathing around my spinal cord and if they had not caught it when they did it likely would have resulted in paralysis (quadriplegia) or death as it damaged my spinal cord, let alone the cancer itself. More than once during my treatment I found myself in intensive care, unconscious and fighting for my life. More than once my wife had to go home and try to figure out how to tell her 6 and 4 year-olds that their dad died last night. Thank god it never came to that, but I just cannot imagine what that had to be like for her.
As it is, I underwent several surgeries at University of Utah and Hunstman, seriously intensive chemotherapy, and proton therapy at Loma Linda University Medical Center in California (
https://www.protons.com/) and I am now more than a decade cancer free.
I have to use that sometimes to remind my wife that when they found my cancer, I was going in because I had a minor pain in my arm. Sometimes you can't know what else is there.
Having been close to that kind of scenario I really feel for Larry Miller's family. I think his death was ultimately preventable, and he could have at least extended his life and had a higher quality of life up to the end. Diabetes is "the silent killer" and if he had stayed up on his regimen he could possibly still be here today.
Rest in peace Larry.