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Help Save 1.800.SUICIDE


VA Medical--Reckless Endangerment Whims

by rcs1

Yesterday, 04 September 2007, day 7 of pneumonia symptoms and the first day after the long Labor Day weekend, I got to the Muskogee VA hospital Emergency Room.  They expedited me through the blood-work labs, chest x-rays, and EKG.  No doubt anywhere.  This was a blazing case of pneumonia, with both lungs heavily involved.  Combined with my insulin-dependent diabetes, hypertensive heart disease, and the chronic Reiter's syndrome atrial fibrillation, it represented a substantial threat to my life.

commentary :: :: :: buzz-it!
 Once upon a time, not too long ago, a VA-Medical-entitled veteran with pneumonia was immediately hospitalized -- for at least the days needed to settle on the best treatment for the individual case.

 Pneumonia is, after all, a virulent bacterial infection to which most Americans have little or no immunity.  Best to stick the sicko in a hospital bed, while the initial load of industrial-strength antibiotics reduces the risk of spread.

 On Monday, 27 August, I traveled from my home in Tulsa to the OK City VA Medical Center (hospital) to receive the results of some important blood tests.  There was something really complicated hiding in among my insulin-dependent diabetes, heart problems, chronic renal failure, runaway triglycerides (documented over 1700 several times), high blood pressure, atrial fibrillation, and recurring iritis (inflammation of the eye).  I'd tested positive for the genetic marker, HLA B-27, establishing chronic Reiter's syndrome, as strange an autoimmune disease-set as can be imagined.

In addition to the test results, I also received what might very well be the Perfect Pneumonia.  This could not have been anything other than a hospital-groomed, antibiotic-resistant, "superbug" pneumonia.

 This is my third go-round with pneumonia.  From this one's first nonproductive coughing -- Wednesday, 29 August -- there was no doubt about its action.  It went straight to the lungs, with a surprisingly high quantity of infected phlegm.

 Yes, I might have caught it anywhere.  But a very short incubation period squares with its super-strong symptoms and points to the hospital exposure of a superbug on 27 August.

 Yesterday, 04 September, day 7 of symptoms and the first day after the long Labor Day weekend, I caught the VA shuttle bus to the Muskogee VA Medical Center (hospital) Emergency Room.  They expedited me through the blood-work labs, chest x-rays, and EKG.  No doubt anywhere.  This was a blazing case of pneumonia, with both lungs heavily involved.  All of my vital and critical readings were dangerously wrong.  Immediate medications were required.

 Then I was parked in a waiting room near the ER and left alone for over an hour -- with my frequently shrieking coughs ringing up and down the hall.   The conversations that sang back from the other waiting rooms along the hall were light-weight medicine with heavy-weight social event content and laughter.

 When the doctor did arrive, he was the right stuff.  Dr. Glenn gave the best, most graphical presentation of my complicated and interacting disease components that I've ever seen a VA doctor do.   Better yet, it was done with a lot of soul and interpersonal communicating.  He asked questions, drew out details, and made sense of my personal medical history in ways that no other VA Medical rep has ever managed.

 But then he was prohibited from keeping me overnight.  No overnight?  WHAT did you say?

 "Push the veteran out the door" is a constant game in VA Medical, but this was ridiculous.  The serious bacterial infection skyrocketed my risk of death from the diabetes and heart-problem tandem.  I had none of my own meds with me and needed them all -- stat.  Any surprise exertion under these circumstances was likely to be deadly.

Unproductive coughing had replaced sleep on Thursday, 30 August.  Most of the very short sleep periods -- 15 to 20 minutes -- came with me braced in an upright sitting position on the edge of my bed.  Most wake-ups came from toppling over.  And as soon as I was horizontal, the adhesive phlegm rolled onto the vocal chords, resulting in explosive, nonproductive coughing.

By Tuesday afternoon, 04 September, I was more than a little crazy with sleep deprivation.  Since Thursday or Friday, reality had been largely replaced by a secret algorithm that was translating the nonproductive coughing into the continuing sagas of three or four different nightmares.  The more coughing, the more story line.  I needed those story lines, but, despite Herculean efforts, I could not locate the encrypted files on my computer.  (???)

The sagas had replaced thinking, too.  It wasn't until early Tuesday, 04 September, that I realized that I had to get to an Emergency Room.  By then, I'd lost all track of medications routinely taken for my core conditions.  When Dr. Glenn told me how bad my vitals and blood sugars were on Tuesday afternoon, the realization that I'd not been taking my meds was like a collision.  WHAT?  I always take my meds.  My heart can't live without those meds.

My need for meds made no difference to the political hack in charge.  

 The prohibition of an overnight was laid on by some unseen VA medicrat who spews cost-cutting policy for the Regime.

 The Muskogee facility, he reportedly said, was under "Divert".  No hospital beds were available.  Period.

 I asked how much of my death-risk was automatically deleted by the the facility's "Divert" status.  No answer from Dr. Glenn.  Lots of pooh-poohing from the nurse.

Dr. Glenn went back to the political hack three times with new arguments.  No budging.  No exceptions.  No hospital room.  "I'm sorry," Dr. Glenn said on each return.

 It quickly got worse.  There was no way for me to rent a hospital room away from the working halls.  The rental could not be done because I didn't have my meds with me.   WHAT?  Who's in charge of Catch 22 around here?  There's no way to buy the evening and morning doses that I need?  Does the VA hospital pharmacy close down rather than serve in an emergency?    

Am I just to go out by some roadside and maybe survive the night?

The last shuttle bus for Tulsa is long gone.  It left at 3pm.  It's now 4:30pm.

Here's the deal.  Injection of antibotics, a ten-day series of more antibiotics in tablet form, a small bottle of cough syrup, and out the door.

Meds for my now-extra-dangerous core conditions?  Forget it.  Anybody concerned about the 338 blood sugar?  223 points over normal -- sloshing around in an enlarged left ventricle and enlarged left atrium, both short-circuited by electical malfunctions between brain and heart?  Forget it.  Super-high mortality rate for men over 65.  Forget it.  Out the door.

Diabetic visual problems mean that I've not driven anything since early 1999.   Dr. Glenn picks up the phone and calls the front desk.  The call is two minutes long, tops.  Doctor hangs up and says I've got a ride home waiting at the front desk.  His nurse whisks me off in a wheel chair.

 My ride home is an independent driver volunteer who shows up at around closing time whenever his family business allows the boss to indulge himself -- three or four times a week, he recons.  This could not have been a set-up just for me.  Judging from his cell-phone traffic during the drive, his appearance at Muskogee VA that day had been chancy stuff.  Luck of the draw.

 So the nightmare continues.  Three souls on board the volunteer's vehicle.  Two of them don't know that they're riding with a Perfect Pneumonia in full bloom.

 Home again.  I wolf down my meds and inject the two different insulins, now roughly five hours later than what should have been done at Muskogee.  Was it soon enough to avoid heart attack and/or stroke?  Was the stress of delayed meds sufficient to trigger a heart attack or stroke at some additional stress a week or two in the future?

My experience with fast-acting and slow-acting insulins hammers the 318 blood sugar at 9:31pm Tuesday down to a 107 (normal) at 2:24am Wednesday.

 I live alone.  Nobody to watch over me.  This should be a factor in VA Medical decisions.  Clearly, it's not.  Handle the emergencies your own self -- and get lucky -- or die.

VA patient safety is a feel-good fiction spewed by the political hacks for the worker bees.  The reality is VA patient cost-cutting for the Regime -- where the seeming accidents of policy and the judgment calls of political-hack medicrats can cover up the evidence.

There's more reckless endangerment of life just outside the VA hospital beds than there is in them.

VA Medical should have disappeared into universal health care decades ago.  Low-income two-year-olds in the ghetto, barrio, or on the reservation are as much our human resources as are combat veterans.  We owe them and ourselves their well-managed health care.  But no, no, you can't go around doing something that capitalists can label 'socialist' or 'communist'.

Labels are still more important than universal health.  And we're still on the seemingly endless agenda of the superrich -- money-power first, ordinary people last.

---------------------------------------

Originally published as "VA Medical On The Cheap" on author's blog, DD Revival, Thu 13 Sep 2007. Retitled by the author, Sat 22 Sep 2007.

UPDATED Tue 25 Sep 2007, at 6:15am CDT.

© 2007 by Stephen Neitzke

Display:
hope you are feeling better.  Wish there was an easy way to "fix" all of the problems this administration has created.

by roxy317 on Mon Sep 24, 2007 at 10:04:33 PM EST
roxy317 -- Wishing is good.  But we're way past easy, and that truth has not been confronted yet.  There's no help coming.  And that truth has not been confronted.  No leaders.  We the sovereign people are all we have.  We're useless, worse than useless, until we learn how to fight.

by Stephen Neitzke on Mon Sep 24, 2007 at 11:55:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]
You should not have to suffer ever again thru pneumonia.  Absolutely insist on a PPV.  I just received this vaccination at my last visit to the doctor... All I got out of the deal was a sore arm..there are some side effects.. My doctor can be a real adament wench when it comes to the health of her patients... Are you wearing a health alert bracelet?

http://www.immunize.org/askexperts/experts_ppv.asp

General information about PPV     
Back to top
For whom is pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine recommended?
Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine is recommended for all adults who are age 65 years and older. It is also recommended for persons between the ages of 2 and 64 years who have chronic illnesses specifically associated with increased risk from pneumococcal infection (e.g., cardiovascular disease, pulmonary disease, diabetes mellitus, alcoholism, cirrhosis, or cerebrospinal fluid leaks) or are a candidate for or recent recipient of a cochlear implant.
Persons with asymptomatic or symptomatic HIV infection should be vaccinated. In addition, immunocompromised adults with chronic illnesses specifically associated with increased risk from pneumococcal infection should receive the vaccine (e.g., persons with splenic dysfunction or anatomic asplenia, Hodgkin's disease, lymphoma, multiple myeloma, chronic renal failure, nephrotic syndrome, or conditions such as organ transplantation associated with immunosuppression).
Persons living in special environments or social settings with an identified increased risk from pneumococcal infection (e.g., certain Alaskan Natives and American Indian populations) should also be vaccinated. The vaccine is not indicated for patients having recurrent acute upper respiratory tract infections, such as otitis media and sinusitis.


by avahome on Mon Sep 24, 2007 at 11:10:59 PM EST
avahome -- Deep thanks for this information.  There's not much chance that the VA will spring for this, but I have Medicare and will find my way to a PPV.  This go-round took all my reserves and stood me up in a bad place.  I don't ever want to be out there again.

by Stephen Neitzke on Tue Sep 25, 2007 at 12:05:32 AM EST
[ Parent ]
A horrific experience, but I gotta say, your writing is so good you had me hyperventilating for you.

Hope your posting this means you are now well over the pneumonia.

by Cho on Mon Sep 24, 2007 at 08:04:02 PM EST

Cho -- Thanks for the kudos.  Somehow, the horrendous medical ordeals keep sharpening the wordy stuff.  Mixed feelings on that progression.  Yes, the infection folded under the antibiotics.  And, although some new chest pains required gobbling extra nitro pills, there've been no lightning bolts.  Now there's just the lungs half full of dead junk to cough out.  Well -- that and the daily fatigue that goes with the semi-productive coughing.

by Stephen Neitzke on Mon Sep 24, 2007 at 11:45:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]

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