Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Amazing Story of Mark McEwen

Amazing Story of Mark McEwen

Mark McEwen

I am not a fan of CBS Early Show even when I was here.. but for some reason, I watched it today and glad I did.

I have known Mark McEwen as the weather guy of CBS but didn't know he was out of circulation since last fall. He was a popular guy who has interviewed almost everyone, from Bill Clinton to Mohammed Ali. There was touching story on him today in CBS today that left me moist and rang closer to home for more reasons than one.

Mark McEwen (50+?) had a devastating stroke attack and took ill gravely last fall. He was on Coma for 4 days with bleak prognosis. "The diagnosis of basilar artery thrombosis is a very, very poor prognosis," His neurologist Dr.Medary said. He survived, but that is not what resonated with me. What stuck close to home was the fact that he had to start basically at ground zero and relearn everything, from speaking, to walking to everything else. "Boy, I was in bed, I couldn't walk. I could barely talk. I talked slower and higher," he told CBS.

Today, Mark McEwen has made an amazing recovery. He is now walking, talking and doing most of the things he used to do before. Yeah, he is little slower (than before the stroke stuck him), but it is good to see him completely mobile and independent. He attributed it to

1. Immediate attention

2. Excellent medical care

3. Good post care physiotherapy

Above all, I would attribute his excellent rehabilitation to MarkÂ’s fighting spirit. Couple of things he said that made really think...

"People come in here and say, 'Gee, you've had a great life,'" he said. "I say, 'I have a great life!'"

"All this, is an illusion," he said. "The house, the fame the fortune, what we do. What is important is family and friends. That's what I know."

Today, he has a new mission: He says he wants to do for strokes what Lance Armstrong did for cancer.

"I want people to know that this doesn't discriminate, but I want people also to know that you can come back," he said.

So, why does ring closer to home for me? His amazing fighting spirit is definitely inspiring, but more than that his story rung close to home because of what my father is going through for over 3 years now. I wish he was able to get timely medical attention and a good rehab program. But, many things went inexplicably wrong for him and he hasn't walked by himself since then.

  • CouldnÂ’t get timely medical attention: My parents were in Madambakkam (near Tambaram) when my father was stuck with the stroke in the wee hours of night. He couldnÂ’t get immediate medical attention in the first 3 critical hours. Forget the ambulance, he couldn't even get a taxi to transport him to Tambaram to get some decent medical attention.
  • Money First: On the advice of a local doctor, my mother wanted to get the scan done before taking my father to the hospital. The 24hour Scan service was fast asleep when my mother knocked on them. The Scan guys were disturbed to be disturbed (from their sleep) and wished my mother would just go away. They wanted exact cash remitted first before they would even touch my father.
  • Indifferent Hospital: When my father did finally reach the hospital, he just laid there for several hours before a neurologist showed up. By then, I reached the hospital and when I requested take my father to a city hospital, every antics was used to scare us shifting him (which we eventually did anyways..).
  • Care in the city: It was better than Tambaram, but then the damage had already been done. Most of my father's faculties were damaged and my he had to start basically from ground zero like Mark McEwen and hasn't regained many of his lost faculty.
  • Quackery and Physiotherapy: After few weeks in a hospital, my father came back home unable to do anything on his own. The only recourse for my father was continuous and aggressive physiotherapy and even here we had our share of misfortune. They therapist who came home to work with my father was a rookie and hadn'’t worked with a stroke patient before (which we didn'’t know at that time). She did lot of things incorrectly leading to development of myositis (muscles hardening to become bone like) which has basically made his leg irrevocably immobile.
  • Good Physiotherapy: It took us over 2 years and several therapists to find a therapist who is doing decent job with my father. But it is going to take lot longer than few months to undo the damage done the earlier therapist and we are afraid some of the damages (done by the neurologist & therapist) may be permanent.

Being rather to close to my father's sufferings, I was moved to see the amazing recovery of Mark McEwen. At the same time, I also felt angry that my father is still bedridden and will never be mobile again.

India is making tremendous economic progress and wants to be a super power. By some accounts, medical tourism is picking up in India with Chennai being the capital. But, what good is medical tourism if India can't provide decent medical care to it own citizens. If ordinary middle class citizens can't get paid quality medical care, I shudder to think the plight of countless poor who depend on the government to provide free medical care.

Story in CBS

14 comments:

  1. Ram,

    Very true...I hope your father becomes well as soon as possible.

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  2. Visu - Your post touched my heart. Sad to see what happened to your dad -
    Whom I've known for years as an active person.

    This is one of the things I don't like about India. We talk about the Economic growth etc. yet ...things like what you've described - emergency services etc, drinking water, transportation, etc. are still a major problem in big cities too. Forget small towns.

    Inspite of several downsides to living in the West, one thing that I always like it the Emergency services.

    I can only pray and wish your dad well!

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  3. Visu - Your post touched my heart. Sad to see what happened to your dad -
    Whom I've known for years as an active person.

    This is one of the things I don't like about India. We talk about the Economic growth etc. yet ...things like what you've described - emergency services etc, drinking water, transportation, etc. are still a major problem in big cities too. Forget small towns.

    Inspite of several downsides to living in the West, one thing that I always like it the Emergency services.

    I can only pray and wish your dad well!

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  4. Visu,
    I could understand your feelings and pray for a speedy recovery for your dad. Send me your phone number to my email address and I can call you.

    - Laks Sankaran

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  5. Sad to understand that your dad went through this Ram. Truly empathise with what you are going through. Thank you for posting this.Appreciate your STRENGTH.
    George - IBM Chennai

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  6. brilliant story RAM... the mind is very powerful.. hope and pray that your dad's mind recovers from this.
    George - IBM Chennai

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  7. Balaji, Narayanan, Laks & George

    Thanks a lot for all your wishes..

    At this stage, the prognosis on my Dad is not good.. but miracles do happen I guess...

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  8. Balaji, Narayanan, Laks & George

    Thanks a lot for all your wishes..

    At this stage, the prognosis on my Dad is not good.. but miracles do happen I guess...

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  9. Dear Ram,
    My prayers are with your Father.
    My son lived in Chennai for 2 years and I stayed there a lot (I loved it there). But do let me point out that medical care is not perfect in the US as many people seem to think. I live in a small town in Arkansas and when my husband fell and had to have 9 stiches in his head and had a concussion and cracked wrist, we waited over 4 hours at the Emergency Room. If we have any kind of stroke, heart attack, etc. trauma here, we are probably not going to recover since the care is so poor and takes so long (even though supposedly there is a helicopter to Memphis, TN, the nearest large city 80 miles away)that we won't have a chance of survival. The times my family visited from larger cities and had to use the ER here they were misdiagnosed - every time! I tell my husband it's just another good reason to move away from here!
    May your father strengthen with each passing day.
    Cluny

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  10. Raman
    Thanks..

    Cluny
    Thanks for your thoughts.. and welcome to my blog
    I know they do 'triage' in the US emergency rooms first and then decide on the 'course' of action... Chennai does have some of the best doctors.. but the overall eco-system fails them sometimes..
    btw: I was close to AR couple of days.. had folks from Walmart in my business meeting at KC..

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  11. Clunky,
    About Emergency rooms ( I think you know that already..please ignore if you do).

    They take you in based on the emergency, after looking at your vital signs.

    What you've described..here is
    pathetic ( after the fall ..the fracture etc)..not sure what the people at the ER were thinking.

    In general - I've faced it too..it takes a long time unless...there is a life threat..which is IMHO OK. Priority always should go to life threatening emergencies.

    I recently went in for an asthma attack for my wife...it took 4 hours. But..when I went in to the same hospital complaining of nausea and chest pain..I was taken in ..in less than 5 minutes.

    But - Look at 911 phone calls! Right away, ambulances, firetrucks, police cars, everything would show up in 5 minutes. Can you dream of it in India?

    Misdiagnosis - Happens everywhere all the time!

    FYI - I lived in Bentonville Arkansas for 1 year in 1995.

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  12. Ram ,I found both stories quite touching.

    You may want to read the book, "The Emerging Mind" by Dr. Vilayanur Ramachandran, the world renowned neuroscientist, who has done some pathbreaking work and experiments on stroke patients. He gives instances of some amazing recoveries through unorthodox methods.

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  13. I hope and pray yr dad improves soon!
    But i think overral, the quality of healthcare available to the average indian is pathetic.

    people who have the funds manage better but not necessarily always.

    this happened abt 6 years back.

    Me and dad went for an ECG in cbe. The rsults were bad(seems it had all the signs of myocardial infarction). since he was a diabetic patient, he showed no visible symptoms.

    but the lab tehnicians and the doctor who read the ECG never bothered to inform me abt this abnormality..

    we went back the next day to collect the report and still they showed no signs of urgency.

    it was only when we showed it to our family doctor later in the day did he suggest admitting my dad in the hospital.

    those 24 hours if i think back, anything could've happened!

    we were totally unaware but the doctors and the lab staff who took the ECG knew yet acted like a govt bureaucrat

    its another matter that he passed away 2 yrs back.

    i think just like the blanknoise project, each and every one of us will have a tale to tell about the ruthles healthcare industry in india.

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  14. Narayanan
    Yes.. I have similar experiences with Emergency care in US..

    When I went for my a minor fracture in my left leg.. I waited for couple of hours before I was attended too..

    But when I took my son with a possible back injury.. he was attended to immediately..

    My experience has been.. every patient who goes to emergency 'triage'd first and the care is provided accordingly..

    Raj
    Thanks for the tip.. I will check it out..

    PK
    Thanks.. &
    Sorry to hear about your Appa.. you are absolutely right.. anything could have happened..

    I am not sure where this callous nature comes from.. but my take is somewhere down the bottom.. , we don't respect the value of human life..

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