****11 APRIL GREAT NEWS UPDATE****
I just got off the phone with the SSgt and he informed me that he is being offered a TDY (i.e., government-paid trip) to Duke for his surgery and recovery time! All praise be to God and the humble, servant leaders at the highest levels of the world's greatest Air Force...General Welsh, Lieutenant General Travis (AF Surgeon General), Major General Ediger (Deputy AF Surgeon General), General Hostage (Air Combat Command Commander), and Chief Cody (Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force) for working around the regulations to take care of an Airmen in need. And thanks to all of you for your thoughts, prayers, and e-mails/phone calls to the Medical Group Commander! The SSgt, his 2-year old daughter, and his mom and dad thank you from the bottom of their hearts!
God is good all the time and all the time God is good!
________________________________________________
Fellow Ags, I desperately need your help this morning to get a young Air Force Staff Sergeant urgent brain surgery at Duke University for a severe condition he likely developed due to hard C-130 landings in Iraq. I have known the SSgt and his family for 14 years and consider them family. Please read story below.
I am going way out on a limb here, but the family and I have exhausted all means to resolve the situation via the chain of command and are hoping that the power of TexAgs can help pull off a miracle for a Great American Hero! I highly encourage you to spread the word about this situation by any and all means possible (e.g., social media). The family and I thank you from the bottom of our hearts for anything that you can do!
BOTTOM LINE: I received word over the weekend from the SSgt's father about his urgent medical issue and the obstacles he has faced over the last four months trying to receive the best care possible at Duke. I have known the SSgt since I was his Altar Server Director in Asheville, NC when he was just 14 years old. He is a great kid and I am worried sick about him. His father gave me the rundown of the situation and it seems clear to me that the right thing for the Air Force to do is send him to Duke immediately for the urgent care he needs for the following reasons:
1) Duke University would be able to perform the surgery in a very short amount of time, but having the surgery in California will increase the delay time by as much as two months, thus exposing him to significant and potentially irreversible symptoms, up to and including paralysis. He has had the severe headaches associated with his medical condition for over four years!
2) His mother and father live just 30 minutes from Duke enabling them to provide the 6-10 weeks of optimum post surgery care he requires and help him watch his 2-year old daughter that he has custody of until 15 May. He will be in ICU for 2-3 days after the surgery!
3) He will move to North Carolina upon separating from the military (a humanitarian reassignment to North Carolina could be possible).
4) He has a very serious condition that requires the best brain surgeons in the country, which happen to reside at Duke.
5) Tricare and a world-renowned doctor at Duke have already approved his treatment at Duke (could have had the surgery 3 weeks ago).
BACKGROUND: The SSgt has been with the United States Air Force for about 8.5 years and is currently stationed at Beale Air Force Base, CA. He began his career with the United States Air Force on September 27, 2005. Along with being stationed at Little Rock AFB and spending three years in Germany, he also served a tour in the Middle East supporting Operation IRAQI FREEDOM as a Loadmaster on C-130’s. During his deployment to the Middle East, he developed significant headaches that were originally diagnosed as migraine headaches, eventually losing his flight status and thus having to retrain into the new career field of Geospatial Intelligence; all the while still suffering from severe headaches, which turned out to be incorrectly diagnosed as migraines.
On 18 November, 2013, after having an MRI for the persistent severe headaches, he was diagnosed with Chiari I Malformation and this condition was determined to be the source of his severe headaches. A medical definition of Chiari I Malformation is listed below:
“Arnold–Chiari Malformation, or often simply known as Chiari Malformation, is a malformation of the brain. It consists of a downward displacement of the cerebellar tonsils through the foramen magnum (the opening at the base of the skull), sometimes causing non-communicating hydrocephalus as a result of obstruction of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) outflow. The cerebrospinal fluid outflow is caused by phase difference in outflow and influx of blood in the vasculature of the brain. It can cause headaches, fatigue, muscle weakness in the head and face, difficulty swallowing, dizziness, nausea, impaired coordination, and, in severe cases, paralysis.”
On 28 February, Tricare approved the critical surgery and associated follow-up visits at Duke that he so desperately needs. In addition, Dr. Carlos Bagley, the Director of Neurosurgery at the Duke Spine Center, agreed to evaluate and treat him for his recently diagnosed Chiari I Malformation with compression of the brain stem and upper spinal cord along with syringomyelia and expansion of the lower cervical spinal cord. Dr. Bagley is recommending that he receive treatment as soon as possible to guarantee the best prognosis for both his short and long-term recovery.
After a second round of MRI’s, the Neurosurgeon, Doctor Todd Eads, said in his findings, “There is a large ulcerated syrinx within the cervical spine. The series begins at the C1-2 and extends down to the level of the T2-2 disk space, or about 13.5 cm in length. The maximal diameter is 1.4 cm.” When he talked with Dr. Todd Eads, he told him that he was in amazement that he did not have greater symptoms based on the review of the MRI’s.
DISCUSSION: After doing the research for a doctor in North Carolina and receiving approval for treatment at Duke, the military denied him the ability to have the surgery in North Carolina based solely on policy and protocol (saying there is a doctor available locally that can perform the surgery). However, Duke is covered under TRICARE/United Healthcare and his parents are willing to personally pay for his airline tickets and other expenses travel expenses to and from North Carolina so he can have surgery, but he was told that was not an option. Unfortunately, this inability to be flexible under extreme circumstances and go outside rigid policy and protocol creates a significant dilemma and hardship for his family outlined below:
1. When SSgt questioned the military about care after his brain surgery (i.e., travel from Sacramento to Beale AFB, care after the brain surgery at home, etc…), he was told the Air Force unit would have some people come by and check-in on him, which we feel is totally unacceptable. This is brain surgery, not treatment for a hernia! His mother is currently with him in California (via a one-way ticket) to take care of him before the surgery (to do things for her son to not further complicate his condition), and to provide after surgery care. In order to make this happen, his family is taking away time from work to travel and stay in California (the father will be going before the surgery and staying for a while after the surgery) to care for him during his recovery from the brain surgery, thus placing a significant hardship on the family. Thank God that they both have flexible employers!
2. Duke University would be able to perform the surgery in a very short amount of time, but having the surgery in California will increase the delay time by as much as two months, thus exposing him to significant and potentially irreversible symptoms, up to and including paralysis. He has his consultation with the surgeon in California on April 15, 2014 (this big delay is due in part to the shortage of doctors in California). After the consultation, they will then still have to schedule surgery. This process has taken way too long and his family will have to deal with any long-term issues created by the unnecessary delays. If he would have been allowed to have the procedure performed at Duke, he would have already been almost three weeks into his recovery period, yet as it stands he still has not even had the consultation with the doctor in California.
3. Considering the seriousness of his condition and the importance of getting the surgery as soon as possible, he is being forced to choose between doctors that he does not feel as comfortable with and the possibility of significant crippling symptoms, up to an including permanent paralysis.
The SSgt and his father contacted their US Senators and US Congressman about the situation and on or about April 4, 2014, he did receive a letter from Congressman George Holding that the military had denied him the opportunity to have the surgery performed at Duke Hospital in North Carolina. I am confident this decision was made without the previous two documents being considered (the letters from United Healthcare and Dr. Carlos Bagley) and was likely made with incomplete information. In the letter dated April 4, 2014, denying him to have the surgery performed at Duke, it states that he refused to have the operation in California, which is not true. The doctor asked him where he would be having the surgery. He informed him that he was aiming for Duke (hence the approved referral the same month by United Healthcare). He never refused anything and only told the doctor he would prefer to have the surgery at Duke, because it's close to home for his care after the brain surgery and the doctor agreed. In the letter from Dr. Bagley, I point out that at the end, he expresses his professional opinion that he would “advise treatment for him as soon as possible for the best prognosis for both his short and long-term recovery.” We think this letter is very important as it confirms the deep-seated concerns about his long-term health by having the brain surgery performed in California instead of at Duke.
It is important to note that one of his physicians, upon learning that he was a loadmaster on a C-130 deployed in Iraqi, told him that his problems with Chiari Malformation were the result of hard landings during deployment sorties in Iraq. It was during this deployment that his severe headaches started. It is also interesting that after he was denied care at Duke, he searched and found a doctor in San Francisco, but the military told him they would not approve San Francisco because they would have to pay his travel mileage, which is only about $140 (260 miles round trip X $0.53)! He told them that it was not necessary to pay the mileage as he would incur the cost himself, since the doctor at San Francisco was one of the higher rated neurosurgeons on the west coast. However, once again, he was denied the care that he deserves.
The SSgt's mother is in California for the unforeseen future because after all of these months dealing with the doctors, surgery in California still has not been scheduled. If he is allowed to come to North Carolina, his mother and father would be able to provide the important after brain surgery care, in their home, without any increased difficulties and hardship to their family. This decision is a common sense decision, that may not be consistent with the military rules, but the risk of not sending him far exceeds the letter of the rule. In addition, there are legal ways to get around the rules in extreme cases such as this one. According to Duke's website they are studying and operating on Chiari Malformation patients, which is another reason that makes Duke the best choice.
This SSgt has served our country honorably for the past 8.5 years. So, I would appreciate any assistance that you can provide that will get him approved to have this critical surgery performed at Duke as soon as possible in order to ensure that he does not suffer any significant and potentially irreversible symptoms up to and including non-reversible paralysis. It is also important to mention that his parents (as do all those of military personnel) have served our country diligently in supporting him and our country while he has been away serving in the United States Air Force.
RECOMMENDATION: Pray.
Thanks for taking the time to help a Great American Hero and his family during this difficult time. We are forever in your debt!
God bless you and God bless America!
Very Respectfully,
Neil "Doc" Sanger, Lt Col, PhD, USAF
[This message has been edited by Air Force Ags (edited 4/9/2014 7:56a).]
[This message has been edited by Air Force Ags (edited 4/10/2014 10:19a).]
[This message has been edited by Air Force Ags (edited 4/11/2014 2:07p).]
[This message has been edited by Air Force Ags (edited 4/11/2014 8:10p).]
I just got off the phone with the SSgt and he informed me that he is being offered a TDY (i.e., government-paid trip) to Duke for his surgery and recovery time! All praise be to God and the humble, servant leaders at the highest levels of the world's greatest Air Force...General Welsh, Lieutenant General Travis (AF Surgeon General), Major General Ediger (Deputy AF Surgeon General), General Hostage (Air Combat Command Commander), and Chief Cody (Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force) for working around the regulations to take care of an Airmen in need. And thanks to all of you for your thoughts, prayers, and e-mails/phone calls to the Medical Group Commander! The SSgt, his 2-year old daughter, and his mom and dad thank you from the bottom of their hearts!
God is good all the time and all the time God is good!
________________________________________________
Fellow Ags, I desperately need your help this morning to get a young Air Force Staff Sergeant urgent brain surgery at Duke University for a severe condition he likely developed due to hard C-130 landings in Iraq. I have known the SSgt and his family for 14 years and consider them family. Please read story below.
I am going way out on a limb here, but the family and I have exhausted all means to resolve the situation via the chain of command and are hoping that the power of TexAgs can help pull off a miracle for a Great American Hero! I highly encourage you to spread the word about this situation by any and all means possible (e.g., social media). The family and I thank you from the bottom of our hearts for anything that you can do!
BOTTOM LINE: I received word over the weekend from the SSgt's father about his urgent medical issue and the obstacles he has faced over the last four months trying to receive the best care possible at Duke. I have known the SSgt since I was his Altar Server Director in Asheville, NC when he was just 14 years old. He is a great kid and I am worried sick about him. His father gave me the rundown of the situation and it seems clear to me that the right thing for the Air Force to do is send him to Duke immediately for the urgent care he needs for the following reasons:
1) Duke University would be able to perform the surgery in a very short amount of time, but having the surgery in California will increase the delay time by as much as two months, thus exposing him to significant and potentially irreversible symptoms, up to and including paralysis. He has had the severe headaches associated with his medical condition for over four years!
2) His mother and father live just 30 minutes from Duke enabling them to provide the 6-10 weeks of optimum post surgery care he requires and help him watch his 2-year old daughter that he has custody of until 15 May. He will be in ICU for 2-3 days after the surgery!
3) He will move to North Carolina upon separating from the military (a humanitarian reassignment to North Carolina could be possible).
4) He has a very serious condition that requires the best brain surgeons in the country, which happen to reside at Duke.
5) Tricare and a world-renowned doctor at Duke have already approved his treatment at Duke (could have had the surgery 3 weeks ago).
BACKGROUND: The SSgt has been with the United States Air Force for about 8.5 years and is currently stationed at Beale Air Force Base, CA. He began his career with the United States Air Force on September 27, 2005. Along with being stationed at Little Rock AFB and spending three years in Germany, he also served a tour in the Middle East supporting Operation IRAQI FREEDOM as a Loadmaster on C-130’s. During his deployment to the Middle East, he developed significant headaches that were originally diagnosed as migraine headaches, eventually losing his flight status and thus having to retrain into the new career field of Geospatial Intelligence; all the while still suffering from severe headaches, which turned out to be incorrectly diagnosed as migraines.
On 18 November, 2013, after having an MRI for the persistent severe headaches, he was diagnosed with Chiari I Malformation and this condition was determined to be the source of his severe headaches. A medical definition of Chiari I Malformation is listed below:
“Arnold–Chiari Malformation, or often simply known as Chiari Malformation, is a malformation of the brain. It consists of a downward displacement of the cerebellar tonsils through the foramen magnum (the opening at the base of the skull), sometimes causing non-communicating hydrocephalus as a result of obstruction of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) outflow. The cerebrospinal fluid outflow is caused by phase difference in outflow and influx of blood in the vasculature of the brain. It can cause headaches, fatigue, muscle weakness in the head and face, difficulty swallowing, dizziness, nausea, impaired coordination, and, in severe cases, paralysis.”
On 28 February, Tricare approved the critical surgery and associated follow-up visits at Duke that he so desperately needs. In addition, Dr. Carlos Bagley, the Director of Neurosurgery at the Duke Spine Center, agreed to evaluate and treat him for his recently diagnosed Chiari I Malformation with compression of the brain stem and upper spinal cord along with syringomyelia and expansion of the lower cervical spinal cord. Dr. Bagley is recommending that he receive treatment as soon as possible to guarantee the best prognosis for both his short and long-term recovery.
After a second round of MRI’s, the Neurosurgeon, Doctor Todd Eads, said in his findings, “There is a large ulcerated syrinx within the cervical spine. The series begins at the C1-2 and extends down to the level of the T2-2 disk space, or about 13.5 cm in length. The maximal diameter is 1.4 cm.” When he talked with Dr. Todd Eads, he told him that he was in amazement that he did not have greater symptoms based on the review of the MRI’s.
DISCUSSION: After doing the research for a doctor in North Carolina and receiving approval for treatment at Duke, the military denied him the ability to have the surgery in North Carolina based solely on policy and protocol (saying there is a doctor available locally that can perform the surgery). However, Duke is covered under TRICARE/United Healthcare and his parents are willing to personally pay for his airline tickets and other expenses travel expenses to and from North Carolina so he can have surgery, but he was told that was not an option. Unfortunately, this inability to be flexible under extreme circumstances and go outside rigid policy and protocol creates a significant dilemma and hardship for his family outlined below:
1. When SSgt questioned the military about care after his brain surgery (i.e., travel from Sacramento to Beale AFB, care after the brain surgery at home, etc…), he was told the Air Force unit would have some people come by and check-in on him, which we feel is totally unacceptable. This is brain surgery, not treatment for a hernia! His mother is currently with him in California (via a one-way ticket) to take care of him before the surgery (to do things for her son to not further complicate his condition), and to provide after surgery care. In order to make this happen, his family is taking away time from work to travel and stay in California (the father will be going before the surgery and staying for a while after the surgery) to care for him during his recovery from the brain surgery, thus placing a significant hardship on the family. Thank God that they both have flexible employers!
2. Duke University would be able to perform the surgery in a very short amount of time, but having the surgery in California will increase the delay time by as much as two months, thus exposing him to significant and potentially irreversible symptoms, up to and including paralysis. He has his consultation with the surgeon in California on April 15, 2014 (this big delay is due in part to the shortage of doctors in California). After the consultation, they will then still have to schedule surgery. This process has taken way too long and his family will have to deal with any long-term issues created by the unnecessary delays. If he would have been allowed to have the procedure performed at Duke, he would have already been almost three weeks into his recovery period, yet as it stands he still has not even had the consultation with the doctor in California.
3. Considering the seriousness of his condition and the importance of getting the surgery as soon as possible, he is being forced to choose between doctors that he does not feel as comfortable with and the possibility of significant crippling symptoms, up to an including permanent paralysis.
The SSgt and his father contacted their US Senators and US Congressman about the situation and on or about April 4, 2014, he did receive a letter from Congressman George Holding that the military had denied him the opportunity to have the surgery performed at Duke Hospital in North Carolina. I am confident this decision was made without the previous two documents being considered (the letters from United Healthcare and Dr. Carlos Bagley) and was likely made with incomplete information. In the letter dated April 4, 2014, denying him to have the surgery performed at Duke, it states that he refused to have the operation in California, which is not true. The doctor asked him where he would be having the surgery. He informed him that he was aiming for Duke (hence the approved referral the same month by United Healthcare). He never refused anything and only told the doctor he would prefer to have the surgery at Duke, because it's close to home for his care after the brain surgery and the doctor agreed. In the letter from Dr. Bagley, I point out that at the end, he expresses his professional opinion that he would “advise treatment for him as soon as possible for the best prognosis for both his short and long-term recovery.” We think this letter is very important as it confirms the deep-seated concerns about his long-term health by having the brain surgery performed in California instead of at Duke.
It is important to note that one of his physicians, upon learning that he was a loadmaster on a C-130 deployed in Iraqi, told him that his problems with Chiari Malformation were the result of hard landings during deployment sorties in Iraq. It was during this deployment that his severe headaches started. It is also interesting that after he was denied care at Duke, he searched and found a doctor in San Francisco, but the military told him they would not approve San Francisco because they would have to pay his travel mileage, which is only about $140 (260 miles round trip X $0.53)! He told them that it was not necessary to pay the mileage as he would incur the cost himself, since the doctor at San Francisco was one of the higher rated neurosurgeons on the west coast. However, once again, he was denied the care that he deserves.
The SSgt's mother is in California for the unforeseen future because after all of these months dealing with the doctors, surgery in California still has not been scheduled. If he is allowed to come to North Carolina, his mother and father would be able to provide the important after brain surgery care, in their home, without any increased difficulties and hardship to their family. This decision is a common sense decision, that may not be consistent with the military rules, but the risk of not sending him far exceeds the letter of the rule. In addition, there are legal ways to get around the rules in extreme cases such as this one. According to Duke's website they are studying and operating on Chiari Malformation patients, which is another reason that makes Duke the best choice.
This SSgt has served our country honorably for the past 8.5 years. So, I would appreciate any assistance that you can provide that will get him approved to have this critical surgery performed at Duke as soon as possible in order to ensure that he does not suffer any significant and potentially irreversible symptoms up to and including non-reversible paralysis. It is also important to mention that his parents (as do all those of military personnel) have served our country diligently in supporting him and our country while he has been away serving in the United States Air Force.
RECOMMENDATION: Pray.
Thanks for taking the time to help a Great American Hero and his family during this difficult time. We are forever in your debt!
God bless you and God bless America!
Very Respectfully,
Neil "Doc" Sanger, Lt Col, PhD, USAF
[This message has been edited by Air Force Ags (edited 4/9/2014 7:56a).]
[This message has been edited by Air Force Ags (edited 4/10/2014 10:19a).]
[This message has been edited by Air Force Ags (edited 4/11/2014 2:07p).]
[This message has been edited by Air Force Ags (edited 4/11/2014 8:10p).]