HANOI JANE TO AMERICAN VETERANS: “GET A LIFE”

Ewwww. It makes you want to go wash your hands. I’m sorry, folks. Janebo is never going to float my boat unless I launch it in a urinal. Considering the stellar reputation her father enjoyed, how or why she would choose communism and being a traitor over good deeds and an illustrious career in Hollywood is unfathomable. So much talent wasted on self-indulgence and narcissistic pursuit of the camera lens. Too bad it was in downtown Hanoi, Janebo. You missed your calling. I guess I will “get a life” by foregoing The Butler.

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Posted in Complaints Department | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

VA TENNIS: GAME, SET, …

This is one of those stories I have been itching to write. I have been waiting exactly six thousand nine hundred and thirty nine days. Due to the backlog in 1994, somehow this one got overlooked. I am fond of the Shakespearean verse from Richard III where he shouts “A horse! A horse!. My kingdom for a horse!” and the verse it spawned (or vice versa)

For want of a nail the shoe was lost.
For want of a shoe the horse was lost.
For want of a horse the rider was lost.
For want of a rider the message was lost.
For want of a message the battle was lost.
For want of a battle the kingdom was lost.
And all for the want of a horseshoe nail.

The modern day appendage to this is my 1994 claim for what I thought was Porphyria Cutanea Tarda (PCT), secondary to Hepatitis in service or from Agent Orange. For lack of a lawyer, the claim was lost.  VA can’t leave these things alone and immediately turned it into a claim for hepatitis and a claim for porphyria due strictly to AO. In relatively short order (seven months and seven days), they denied because there were no records in my SMRs of hepatitis and that I was never in Vietnam. At some point they had mailed me a C&P for a tinnitus exam and I missed it.

I dutifully filed my NOD and sent them evidence to rebut both the above. They received it and also issued a Statement Of the Case (SOC)  January 9th, 1995 admitting as much. I was chastised for missing my last C&P for tinnitus and rescheduled for February 8th. I attended that and sat back to wait. I became ill and gradually forgot about it. These matters take time. My AMVET told me so. Apparently there was a backlog in 1995- or not.

When I became far too ill to work any more in 2006, I refiled for the same three claims. My shiny new Military Order of the Purple Heart (MOPH) SO chose to use exactly what the VA had used so it would be a “reopening” of the 1994 claim. Thank You Bruce. Within three months VA had approved me for tinnitus but paid me back to 1994. Being stupid, I thought that was perfectly normal. That’s when they screwed up. If they’d just given me my new date of 2007, I’d be dumb and happy and wouldn’t be typing this.

When I prevailed on the hepatitis in 2008, I found it odd that I had won on the exact same 1994 evidence I resubmitted in the reopening. VA had not acknowledged I was in Vietnam until April of 2007 even though I sent them those very same records on December 2nd, 1994. I decided to fight. If they paid the tinnitus back to 1994, something was going on.

Just because you hold the winning cards and no one can dispute it, you still don’t own the gambling hall where you’re playing. The VA dealer can say “Sorry, bud. That’s a losing hand. You didn’t file your Form 9.” In order to verify it’s a losing hand, you have to know what the dealer is holding. You can’t just take his word for it. I requested my C-file to see who was funning whom. There, in black and white was the new and horribly material evidence I submitted that they admitted receiving and dated stamped December 7th, 1994- a day that will live in infamy. It was also the evidence they were now denying existed until 2007.

VA has no operations plan to describe what happened in 1994-95. The evidence in the file, called the EOR (evidence of record), is a record of what transpired-not what was supposed to have transpired. However, VA attempted to reconstruct the 1994 decision based on what should have happened if it had been done according to Hoyle. They looked at the SOC as having a cutoff date sixty days from the receipt of the SOC or, in the alternative, within one year of the initial denial. VA  looked through the file and saw no further correspondence or activity after my tinnitus C&P in February and simply forgot about it. Case closed. Claimant forgot to perfect appeal. This was explanation number one. If you ignore the evidence prior to the SOC, you can come to this conclusion. Since VA said the decision was based on all the EOR, something was amiss.

When I was finally granted my PCT claim five months later, VA short sheeted me once again and refused to revisit 1994. This time the Decision Review Officer (DRO) freely admitted (and contradicted the denial rationale of the hepatitis claim) they had indeed received the new evidence of duty in Vietnam. No mention of any hepatitis records submitted, mind you. That was another subject. Stay with us, Mr. Nod. This is very confusing.  This evidence did not prove I had PCT according to them. It merely proved I was there.  Explanation #2  was to say that if… IF…I had sent in my Form 9 in time, they would have mailed me a Supplemental SOC continuing the denial even though my service in Vietnam (and presumptive exposure)was conceded. This lovely explanation failed to take into account that they never acknowledged I was there (in Vietnam) until April 2007.  

Last but not least,  a third explanation was proffered. Yes we paid you back to 1994 for tinnitus because your claim was still open and there was some “disagreement” about the terms. However, do not confuse the Tinnitus claim with the Hepatitis or PCT claim because Tinnitus was a separate claim and had nothing to do with the other two. This explanation, too, fell flat because it doesn’t explain why they didn’t pay me the $85/month for another thirteen years. When you lie, you have to have a perfect timeline. You need to have the same rater doing the claim so his excuse or lie is going to dovetail in with the prior tale he was weaving. Here, you have three different authors with three different stories as to how 1994 went down. The dichotomy is so glaring that the proper procedure is to bring out the bowl and wash your hands of the whole affair like Pontius Pilate.

The die was cast. VA refused to budge. Since they controlled the RO and the wallet, there was no more argument. I went the extra mile on a DRO review to boot on all three claims thinking this was the ticket to a rational, intelligent individual who could sort it out. Wrong. No one could see or admit the presence of the submitted evidence in 1994. Or, if they did, it was to say it was not probative. What was never discussed was that by the act of submitting the evidence, a new decision was required as mentioned in the 1995 SOC.  If you anally pursue the lack of a Form 9, you can divert attention to the want of that horseshoe nail. Eventually someone has to acknowledge that the shoe was never nailed on in the first place.

Fully confident in my verbal abilities, I had a Board hearing face-to-face for  an hour and forty minutes and felt I had finally removed the cobwebs and resolved the confusion. The Veterans Law Judge merely rubber-stamped the RO decision and carefully avoided the tarbaby of the  Pearl Harbor Day evidence. How long they thought they could skirt this issue and refuse to discuss it and the pertinence to 38 CFR §3.156(b) and/or (c) was predicated on their assumption that I would abandon it. VA counts on this. VA depends on this. This is why you have to keep that Win or Die mentality about you. Hold your cards and don’t fold. Call the pit boss over to look at your hand again. Have him tell you the dealer is right. Get it on paper.

VA is loathe to pay out old, large settlements. How much is a large one? Probably over $25,000 dollars these days. Ever since they were forced by the MOPH to rescind the Exorbitant Awards Program in 2008, VA has been communicating these on back channels to avoid appearances of impropriety. My settlement, based on medical evidence well-documented, is on the order of 20% for Hepatitis under the older, more permissible Diagnostic Code 7345, 40% for Porphyria and 10% for tinnitus. I have a CUE claim in for  PCT scarring (10%) which VA rescinded to 0% after issuing the 40% Porphyria grant. 40%+20%+10%+10% in VA math is 60%. Multiply that for 237 months and VA gets green around the gills. This, then is the crux of the problem. It was what prevented them from striking a bargain earlier. Had I folded, this crossroads would never have been reached.

VA was not even inclined to even meet my attorney halfway in October. They ignored our appellant’s brief and opposed a motion for oral briefing. Suddenly,  four years into my appeal, they had a change of heart. After a month of trying to find a politically correct way of telling the VLJ he made an error, we have progressed to this.

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So, after six years from filing, the hamster wheel is still spinning merrily along. I estimate  several months to get any response out of the VLJ. After that, another six month delay in finding suitable mailing arrangements to get the eight-volume C- file back to Seattle. Then we begin the much anticipated Fenderson rating where VA will attempt to claim they have no records whatsoever of my health in 1994 and  give me the 0%  ice creme cone with no ice creme in, on, or near it. After a suitable number of years , we’ll probably be back at the BVA or the Court to argue the correct percentages all over again.

I know many of you do not have Tiger blood in you. The HCV saps it out of you. That’s why I took point on this one. VA kindled a fire in me that cannot be quenched. They gave me the Tim Poe/Dr. Phil treatment. They said I was never there. They said I was a liar.

You do not know how hurtful those words are. You cannot know that I had to curb my words over my 1989 filing because I had signed non-disclosure agreements after my service in Laos. I kept my pledge in 1994 as well by only filing the records needed to substantiate my claim. VA chose not to recognize it or ignored it. They did finally acknowledge it in 2007 but abruptly changed their story yet again in 2009. Perhaps you can see some of my anger when I write of someone who engages in stolen valour. I can’t even get my legitimate service acknowledged and here are bozos running around with upside down medals getting free meals at Mickey D’s. I don’t want fame. I don’t want medals. I want compensation I filed for.

Now, with not the least hesitation, VA has reversed course. No “We regret we made a mistake in 1994, sir.” is forthcoming.  No “The miscreants at the RO will be drawn and quartered and fed to the dogs at first light.” will ever pass their lips. There is no rhyme or reason for this on its face. It’s akin to that old Neil Young song The Last Trip to Tulsa during his LSD days:

Well, I used to be asleep
you know
With blankets on my bed.
I stayed there for a while
‘Til they discovered I was dead.
The coroner was friendly
And I liked him quite a lot.
If I hadn’t ‘ve been a woman
I guess I’d never have been caught.
They gave me back my house and car
And nothing more was said.

And that, inevitably, is what will happen here. The question is how much longer will they  continue and will they tire of this game? Given the statistics, I’m liable to be dead before this is completed.

Currently, fifty three Veterans perish every day while waiting for benefits earned and due.

That pencils out to slightly more than two Veterans per hour. If more Americans were aware of this horrible statistic, it would create an uproar. Or would it?

YOU REPORT

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Posted in ASKNOD BOOK, CAvC HCV Ruling | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

DRIVE THRU WINDOWS NOW AT MAJOR VAROs

In an attempt to speed up the backlog, Veterans Service Center Managers have been instructed to install drive thru windows at all VA Regional Offices as quickly as possible.

Citing the need for improved claims processing, Fully Developed Claims (FDCs)can now be dropped off without a long trip to the VSO at the mall. Yes, you be stylin’ in the hood when you pull up in your ride completely prepared with a FDC CD with your claim safely burned in.

When queried about how much time it was purported to save in Oakland , the VSCM  Ulrike Willamon was noncommittal. She toyed with the idea of about .003 days and maybe slightly more but pointed out the confidence it would induce in claimants: “Doing someting is better dan doing nutting.”

New Waco drive thru with David Koresh "frown"

New Waco drive thru with David Koresh “frown”

New Oakland Drive Thru. Two lanes, no backlog

New Oakland Drive Thru. Two lanes, no backlog

Posted in Humor | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

ALLISON IN WONDERLAND

This just in from Frank the Maple man.

When a “progressive” newspaper like the Washington Post speaks out, or permits others to use their fishwrap,  against the ruling Administration and one of his cabinet hirelings,  you just know the King’s new invisible finery is going to be put to the test.

Rep. D.D. Hunter and Pete Hegseth, his wordsmith, today vocalized for all to hear what many have been nodding their heads and saying privately for weeks. Ever since Allison in Wonderland went up on the Hill and wove her tale of a rabbit hole of claims and a cat with a timepiece to fix it, Congress in both houses has been rather aloof and cool to both generals.

You get to do the “Wolf! Yo! I say Wolf-yonder! Bring the guns!”  on several occasions before the novelty wears off. Chicken Little didn’t get the email and was forced to repeat the blunder fifty years or more later. Doesn’t anyone read George Santayana anymore?

Well, here we are. Someone has discovered that the books have been cooked and things are actually worse than the bean counters said they were. It actually takes way more than 273 days, on average, to get your claim adjudicated. Try 600 days at some of the bigger  VAROs they’ve outfitted with the drive-thru windows for the fully developed claims.  Why they put in bulletproof glass is still unexplained.

In all fairness, let’s be realistic. Would I want that job? Would you? I’m sure we’d be well-intentioned just as Gen. Shinseki most undoubtedly is. I may give him a lot of grief here but his little people are killing him. They’re completely caught up in a culture that died around World War Vietnam. Deny. Deny. If they don’t appeal, there’s more bonuses for us. These untermenschen are the reason we suffer as we do. Instead of a culture  modeled on Greece’s where warriors were considered just below Gods, our Veterans Administration obfuscates, nitpicks and delays settling with Vets until they are between the proverbial rock and hard place. Having a complaisant VSO willing to settle for tinnitus and withdrawing the TBI claim doesn’t help much either. Or the one I heard today about the C&P where the Doctor did a TBI exam but managed to overlook the amputation of one of his limbs. Good to go, bro!

A new paradigm is in the offing. The President is going to discover this hot potato is not going to go down well with the majority of Americans. They vote. When they see their next door neighbor, who was a used car salesman, come back from playing Nasty Guard for a year instead of a weekend missing major bits and pieces, they commiserate with the fellow’s plight.  This is something that “resonates” as they say on CNN. Our supervisors in Southeast Asia were fond of calling this collateral damage regardless of who got clobbered. The newsies have a field day with it. The same phenomenon is now unfolding in public. By the time I reached draft age in 1969, there were starting to be a lot of Vets in wheel chairs missing legs. This is that odd side effect of stepping on mines. But they were visible by then. They became even more commonplace over the years following the war and had finally started to abate as many died or became unable to get out in public.

We now are starting to see a new “bloom” of these battle injuries and many are far worse due to the improvements of medical science. They tug at heartstrings. They evoke sympathy. And they bring the inevitable questions out about why these poor souls are disenfranchised from their promised benefits. Backlogs don’t cut it. Old VA AO claims are not working in the blame game. Horribly damaged Vets making “questionable” PTSD claims can no longer be made the scapegoat. In this day and age of instant communications, Vets can find others similarly situated and focus their frustration. VSOs can no longer keep these Vets in control like mushrooms in the dark. Outfits like the IAVA are beginning to get the ear of the boys up on the hill , too.

Eric the Last will soon be announcing his sudden interest in Fly fishing and more time with Mrs. S in a less stressful environment. This will in no way be mistaken as an abdication but rather a long planned career move. Allison in Wonderland likewise will sense the impending Kristallnacht. She will soon have an epiphany and take GE up on the board membership she’s been hoping for over a year. That and a side of Professor over at the AF Academy for a while will fill her lifelong dreams of giving something back to the country and women who choose to serve.

I wish them well. They are caught up in a maelstrom not of their making but nevertheless unraveling on their shift. We call this one of those “defecation contacting the rotary wing” moments and there are no chairs left at the end of this musical score to sit down in and say “Not it!” Were they to stay another year or two, they would be there to proclaim a light at the end of the tunnel. Unfortunately they find themselves similarly situated like many who have begun with high hopes at the VA. The problem hasn’t changed. The old boy network is so suffused throughout the system with a superiority complex that no one knows what a box is- let alone how to  think outside of it.

We now have the task of teaching these aborigines how to use Iphones. The way to accomplish this is to remodel the personnel. The staid thinking has to go. If it requires a Presidential directive to permit flushing the backlog out with a universal grant and audit the results over the next several years, so be it. The important thing is to keep the ball rolling. Trying to switch over into a lower gear to get up the hill is best done before you hit the slope. Failing that, strap on a JATO bottle. The object is the summit.  Failure is not an option here. Inaction isn’t either.

Attempting to create a new, parallel production system side by side with an existing one without doubling the personnel is a fool’s errand. Anyone with a background in production can tell you that. Thinking it is going to keep up with the existing method or surpass it is a pipedream.  IT guys are a dime a dozen in this economy. They can be had for pennies on the dollar. We could have given them a hard set of parameters to encompass, a realistic timeline and the assets to accomplish this. Instead we are blessed with VA’s  finest myopic, IT in-house gurus changing parameters faster than they can be typed up. Look at the DoD med records computer fiasco. VA could have made their new computers compatible with DoD’s if they had wanted to. This has now become one of those bar games where you see who blinks first.

Happy Trails to you is warming up in the background. It’s as inevitable as an ingrown toenail from tight cowboy boots. The enigma is who has the cojones to lasso this mess? Whoever gets the job is mostly going to preside over an inevitable status quo process if they simply take the reins from Eric. That’s why this is the perfect time to clean house and make some long overdue changes. The nice thing about a Kristallnacht is you only have  to sweep up the glass once instead of this drip, drip, drip of slow water torture Vets currently endure. Without a major overhaul, the VA is destined for mediocrity for years to come. Will the President squander this watershed moment?

BOLDLY GOING NOWHERE

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WITH VETERANS CLAIMS

Posted in VA BACKLOG | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

SVR RADIO WITH ATTORNEY BOB WALSH

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As some of you know, I used (and still am) Bob Walsh as my mouthpiece to scale the CAVC mountain. I think it will be money well spent and keep him out of bars. With a new wife, he can ill afford to be kiting all over town after hours.

More to the point, he is a former VA attorney and realized their shenanigans early on. This inadvertently gave us a valuable asset who is familiar with all their wiles and ploys. Had he not become disgruntled, we’d be facing his legal acumen today. Even better, he’s a Vietnam Vet. It’s like a double scoop of ice creme for the price of one.

Today we did a program on the backlog and a lot of other information Vets need to be successful in pursuing evidence for their claims. Bob brings a cutting-edge, no-nonsense approach to litigation. I’d say he isn’t as overt as my “Win or Die” advocacy but he sure is a close second. Being an attorney, he and his ilk always caution against extremes or going overboard. I, on the other hand, have a “take no prisoners” approach as many know. I don’t cheat or advocate others do, mind you. I simply feel you need to prosecute it (the claim) with passion. It’s a tortoise vs. the hare thing.

The SVR tape can be accessed soon by visiting the SVR site and listening to it. It’s being edited and archived as I write. I wish to thank all the folks over at Hadit.com including Mike, Jerrell, Bertha, Stretch and any I neglected to mention for inviting me. I have another show scheduled for next Wednesday with them about the Independent Living Program. I’m sure it will go sideways and discuss other topics as well. I enjoy the unstructured format.

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Contrary to what you may read on some Veteran’s sites, attorneys schooled in the VA discipline are are not out to “milk” you like a cow for all the Equal Access to Justice Funds (EAJA) they can. They find chasing ambulances to be beneath them and uncouth.  If they wanted to get rich, I’m sure they would pursue more lucrative venues like representing OJ Simpson or starting their own companies like Legalzoom.com. Face it. Repping Veterans is not the path to fame and riches. Quite the opposite. In spite of our stellar reputation defending the Country against all boarders, Veterans have a spotty record when it comes to remunerating their rainmakers. This is sad because they only charge 20% as mandated by law. As most know, you can’t get an avaricious lawyer to speak to you without signing a 40% pledge. The difference is night and day.

Bob is probably more biased in favor of Vets than even me. I take all claims I inveigh on with a grain of salt until I get a feel for the Vet. Some actually come to me with the most inconsequential, mundane requests for perceived injustices and ask me to sort them out. I honestly have a hard time trying to keep my composure. My claim to fame (if ever I get that lofty) will be for helping Vets dying of HCV who come to me as a last resort. Believe it or not, we here at HCVets and asknod are not that well known. We do not have flashy,wiggly widgets and a high-priced web site with all the whistles. We   have the free version of  the Earl Schieb $99.95 blog site. WordPress is wonderful platform for this and I can’t thank them enough for the forum.

Bob came to me to right an injustice to one of his clients in 2009. I complied and in the process we became acquaintances. It was a natural fit for him to be my mouthpiece when it came time to visit the CAVC. In spite of his pleadings to be given a bye and suggestions of getting a law dog closer to home, I insisted. As most who know me, this is one of my character flaws. I’m sure Cupcake could illuminate a litany of others but let’s not ask her. Bob is not someone you would want to have as an enemy unless you enjoy sleeping with one eye open at all times. He’s subtle but thorough. His able assistant Shawn is another I wouldn’t relish upsetting. She is calm and personable but that merely hides a fierce defense of Vet’s rights. She was a fast learner and never ceases to amaze me with her grasp of Vets concerns and problems.

I would recommend Bob to any of you who need his services. About five minutes after I put this up, he’ll probably call and threaten to disown me if I don’t take it down. He says he wants to retire, but we know better than that. Old law dogs don’t retire. They just adjudicate away. Besides, why would he come on the show if he didn’t need or want the exposure? He sure isn’t a glory hound. There’s no such thing in this VA law business.

Posted in Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

SCIENTOLOGY CHURCH FINDS CURE FOR AGENT ORANGE

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Looking for love in all the wrong places as the song goes. Who would have thunk it? Those religious zealots at the Church of Scientology, founded by famed science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard, are on it,, baby. This enervating article by David Swanson of Veterans Today is a high quality product that illustrates the flaw in our thinking for the last 20 or more years. At first I thought I was reading The Duffel Blog humor, but I checked the header a second time and lo, there it was -VT.

This is priceless. You can’t make this up unless you’re David Koresh or Ron.

“Scientologists believe the regime, which includes massive consumption of vitamins, four-hour sauna sessions and morning runs, can ‘sweat out’ toxins stored in body fat. There are no peer-reviewed studies to back this claim. . . .

This just in from Shawn, our reporter about town up in Kellogg’s very own Battle Creek. Apparently, we’ve been overthinking this whole dioxin/picloram brouhaha. It seems all  that is required is a massive 20-day regimen of vitamins, a good 5 K jaunt daily  and a few hot tub experiences to sweat the toxins out. Et voila! Problem solved in 20 days. Now why didn’t VA try this? Issue every Vet a hot tub, institute a group therapy fun run at the VAMC every week and mail out vitamins by the shit ton. Parkinson’s? I don’t think so. IHD? Gone. Hairy “b” cell leukemia? NIMBY (not in my bones,, Yankee!).

Why, DM2 could even be conquered. VA could become solvent again and have oodles of bucks for the big problems coming up due to the Iraqistan misunderstanding. Sometimes you just have to think outside the medical box and involve serious religions in this. In fact, I vote we turn loose these sleuths on the VA backlog.

Now if they can find a way to “sweat out” that warped gene sequence doomoflotchie. You know. The one that causes Crohn’s, spina bifida, growth hormone deficiencies and all the cancers that aren’t AO-related that we all came down with?

Hi-Ho, Hi-Ho. It’s off to jog we go. Healthy living through Scientology.

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Posted in AO, Humor | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Brain fog

Five star doctor:  

I’ve been unable to find studies on the long-term effects of INF/Rib treatment on brain health although its been used for over twenty years .  We found a library book by Dr. Dan Silverman (physician-researcher at UCLA) called “Your Brain After Chemo.”  It’s mainly about cancer patients but Dr. Silverman has responded to HCV patients in the NYT (2009) blog/articles, When Cancer Treatment Affects Memory.  I’ve added underlines.

“Both you and Dennis S (author of comment #4, above) experienced cognitive deterioration after undergoing ribavirin therapy. Just like certain drugs that are commonly used as chemotherapy agents in the treatment of cancer, ribavirin is a “nucleoside analog” — a class of drugs resembling nucleic acids, which interfere with synthesis of DNA or RNA, or both. And just like many chemotherapy agents, ribavirin can cause side effects like gastrointestinal distress, anemia, hair loss, weight loss, fatigue, mutations leading to birth defects and generalized discomfort. Use of the drug in patients undergoing treatment for viral infections has also been associated with depression, insomnia and impairment of memory and concentration.

Though doctors may say to either of you that what you went through “was not chemo,” your brain may feel that’s a “distinction without a difference.” And for doctors to say that “even if it were. you would have recovered by now,” requires them to ignore the many other people who are also 10 years out (or longer) from their last dose of cancer therapies but who continue to have problems with memory, concentration and other cognitive abilities.

The bottom line is this: though it is not uncommon, unfortunately, for the kinds of symptoms you have experienced to be trivialized or brushed aside by some doctors — whether occurring after chemotherapy for cancer, or after ribavirin+interferon therapy for hepatitis C — it doesn’t mean that your symptoms are not entirely real, and it doesn’t mean that they are not related to the therapy you received.

It may mean that you need to talk to a different doctor, one who will take your symptoms seriously and steer you towards therapeutic approaches aimed at achieving your recovery from them. In the meantime, as a head-start in addressing the issue, “how do I get my memory back?” please see my response to Bob H.’s comment (#1), above.”

The New York Times limits non-subscribers to 10 article views per month–which I’ve reached–but here are two more links. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/04/health/04brod.html?em&_r=0

http://consults.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/17/a-writer-with-chemo-brain-and-attention-deficit-disorder/

Unfortunately, some SVR and non-responding patients may be misdiagnosed with Alzheimer’s in the future because studies on this subject either don’t exist or aren’t published!  But the good news, is that their are some self-help steps one can take and Dr. Silverman is working on brain scan technologies.

Posted in Guest authors, HCV Health, HCV Risks (documented) | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

FACEWINNER

Shawn finds the good stuff…

579833_537736229604892_1417425673_nand this from Deb Zuckerwise. Phil’s on the Wanted: Dead or Alive posters now.

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Posted in Humor | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

THEN YOU MAY BE A VIETNAM VETERAN

com_69_0623_vnIf you always get a lump in your throat when they play the National Anthem, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you know the fourth stanza to the National Anthem and like it better than the first  because it better describes America, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you go off by yourself and cry about the friends you lost that happened forty years ago when you were young, then you may be a  Vietnam Veteran.

If there’s not enough Valium in the world to help you when you go to The Wall, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If  the radio frequency you called in air strikes on is indelibly stamped in your mind but you can’t remember your own anniversary, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If your respect for the Constitution prevents you from caving in the head of some guy who proudly announces “Dude. I fought that war. I went to Canada to avoid the draft”, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you avoided killing any of your new friends at San Francisco International Airport in the late sixties or early seventies when you DEROSed, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you can still remember the name of your pilot and the day he died, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you got the short end of the stick on parades when you got home, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

If you went down to join the VFW when you got out and they told you that you hadn’t served in a “War”, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran

If you were told to change into civvies when you landed at Travis to avoid “problems” while traveling home for leave, then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

And if you answered a drunken woman who came up to you at a cocktail party asking “How could you kill all those people?” by saying “I didn’t. The napalm did. And it wasn’t even a close race either, honey!” then you may be a Vietnam Veteran.

Then you may be a Veteran© Asknod 4/8/2013

There are 857,000 of us left who got the red clay between our toes. We are disappearing faster than snail darters and northern spotted owls. They get more attention, too. All that tells me is I ought to dress up like an owl with fish skin shoes when I go to the VARO.

The Red Clay Club

The Red Clay Club

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Global liver cancer incidence map

Not everyone who is infected with HCV progresses to liver cancer but the incidence of liver countries is worse in some countries.   (Click map or link, the LIVER tab, zoom (+) and hover your mouse over countries you wish to investigate.  Hold mouse down to move it by dragging.)

Mongolia, China, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar (Burma WWII), Korea, all have high rates of liver cancer.  Japan and the Philippines are also high.  I think it’s obvious that many American troops stationed in SE Asia became infected with blood-borne pathogens during their service.  Asian blood donations, massive transfusions,  massive unprotected sex, receipt of unsafe village barbering practices, tattoos, massive unsafe injections and medical procedures, contacts with blood in combat etc…all played important roles in the spread of viruses from Asians to Americans.

liver cancer map

Pulitzer Center maps show very high incidence of liver cancer from hepatitis including Thailand and Vietnam.

The Pulitzer Center created this map with WHO data.

http://globalcancermap.com/

“Almost 85% of liver cancer cases occur in developing nations. In Asian countries such as Mongolia, the burden of disease is blamed on high rates of hepatitis B and C, as well as widespread alcohol use.”

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