Category Archives: chrones disease

Crohn’s Disease & Social Security Disability Benefits

MAW PPP Banner Jan 18 2013

This Blog Post is written by Guest Blogger, Molly Clarke

Please welcome Molly Clarke to the Professional Patient Perspective.  Molly writes for the Social Security Disability Help Blog and works to both promote disability awareness and assist people throughout the Social Security Disability application process. Their website offers a host of informational resources including an interactive disability forum, how-to’s, a Social Security Disability glossary and answers to frequently asked questions.  Please feel free to contact Molly Clarke at mac@ssd-help.org with any questions about applying for disability benefits.

Crohn’s Disease and Social Security Disability Benefits

Crohn’s Disease is an incurable, autoimmune medical condition that generally causes damage and inflammation to the large and small intestines.  Those who suffer from this condition can experience significant abdominal pain and may have difficulty controlling bowel movements.  People with Severe Crohn’s Disease may also suffer from an ongoing variety of serious medical effects of a compromised immune system.  The cumulative physical effects of Crohn’s Disease can also result in severe mental health problems.  If you have Crohn’s Disease and suffer from severe and frequent symptoms, you may find it impossible to maintain steady employment. The resulting loss of income and lack of medical insurance can be financially devastating.

If you find yourself facing these circumstances, you may qualify for Social Security Disability (SSD) benefits. The following will provide you with the information you need to begin the SSD application process.

Social Security Disability Benefit Programs

SSD benefits are governed and distributed by the Social Security Administration (SSA).  The SSA operates two separate programs that provide financial assistance to sick or disabled individuals. Each of these programs has their own set of eligibility requirements.

  •  SSDI – Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) is a program that offers benefits to disabled workers.  SSDI is funded by taxes that workers throughout the country pay into the program. Therefore, eligibility for SSDI is determined by applicants’ work history. To qualify, you will need to have earned income and contributed to the program in the past. Click here to read more about SSDI
  • SSI - Supplemental Security Income (SSI) is a needs-based program that provides benefits to disabled or elderly individuals who have very little income. To qualify for SSI, individuals must meet very strict financial limitations. Click here to read more about SSI.

In some cases, applicants can qualify for both SSI and SSDI.

Is Crohn’s Disease a Disability?

In addition to meeting the technical requirements that have been listed above, individuals must also meet the SSA’s definition of disability. Generally, the SSA considers a disability to be a condition that is expected to last at least one year and keep an individual from working.

To judge the severity of a specific condition, the SSA consults an official guidebook of potentially disabling conditions, known as the “Blue Book.” To qualify for SSD benefits with Crohn’s Disease, applicants must meet the criteria of Blue Book listing “5.06- Inflammatory Bowel Disease.”   Criteria for this listing include:

  •  Having a diagnosed IBD***

 -AND-

  • Having an obstruction of the small intestine or colon that requires at least two hospitalizations 60 days apart in a 6 month period.***

 -OR-

  • Two or more complications related to your Crohn’s disease that include untreatable anemia, a bowel obstruction, significant weight loss, a painful abdominal mass, an abscess or fistula.***

Here is this Blue Book listing on the SSA’s website.

***The SSA will consider the combined effects of all conditions that you may suffer from. For this reason, it is important you include information about any other ailments your Crohn’s Disease may have caused. This will give the SSA a better understanding of your limitations and consequential inability to work.

Medical Vocational Allowance

Individuals who have Crohn’s Disease may find that while they don’t meet the specific Blue Book requirements, they are nevertheless disabled by their condition. In that regard, if your symptoms keep you from maintaining employment but don’t match the Blue Book criteria, you may still be able to qualify for SSD benefits under a “Medical Vocational Allowance.”  

For example, if an applicant has not been hospitalized two times in the last six months, but cannot keep their job due to daily ongoing unpredictable bouts with paralyzing severe bouts of cramping pain or because they must spend extensive amounts of time each day in the bathroom—the SSA may take this into account and award this person benefits under a “Medical Vocational Allowance.”

To determine whether or not you qualify for a Medical Vocational Allowance, the SSA will look for evidence that your condition limits your ability to sit or stand for significant periods of time, lift or carry items, or follow instructions. The SSA will also consider your age, past work experience, and your ability to re-train and enter a different occupational field. Typically, and this may be of significant importance to many people, the SSA considers applicants 50 years or older to be unable to be re-trained to adapt to a different type of work.

 Preparing to Apply for Social Security Disability Benefits

Although the applications and instructions necessary to apply for SSD benefits are readily available on the SSA’s website, it is important not to rush into this process because many applications are initially denied because applicants made simple mistakes, are disorganized or do not supply the correct medical documentation.  In such instances, applicants must go through an appeals process which could take YEARS.  Therefore, before applying, make certain that you have financial records, physician’s statements, treatment histories, and any relevant medical exam results to support your disability claim.  As a result, by simply understanding what is expected during this process and being thorough in your preparation, you can significantly increase your chances of quickly receiving the financial assistance you need.

The Application Process & Attorney Fees

Once you are ready to begin the application process, you can do so online or in person at your local Social Security office. If at any point you are feeling overwhelmed or confused by application procedures, it may be in your best interest to retain the services of an attorney or patient advocate. A legal professional can assist you at any stage of the process and will ensure that your application thoroughly documents your condition and symptoms.  Moreover, the attorney who represents you applying for disability benefits is only paid if you are awarded benefits. If your claim is denied, your attorney will not receive any sort of compensation.  Additionally, the SSA has certain limits in place regarding attorneys’ fees such that they can only receive 25% of the applicant’s first payment (i.e., his or her “retroactive benefits”) or $6,000—whichever amount is less. This money is deducted from the successful applicant’s first payment and sent directly to the attorney by the SSA. 

After Receiving a Decision

A   As previously mentioned, many initial applications for SSD benefits are denied. This happens for many different reasons. Most often, applicants are denied for the following reasons:

  • His or her claim lacks hard medical evidence.
  • The applicant is filing a new claim rather than appealing an old claim.
  • The applicant’s income exceeds the “substantial gainful activity” allowance (i.e., $1,040 per month).
  • The applicant fails to follow treatment as prescribed by a doctor.
  • The applicant fails to attend appointments or respond to requests for more information from the SSA.

If your initial claim is denied, do not panic. You should appeal this decision within 60 days.

After Being Awarded Disability Benefits

If you are awarded benefits, the SSA will conduct “continuing disability reviews” approximately every three years. In some cases, when the applicant is expected to recover, the SSA will conduct reviews sooner. In cases where the applicant is not expected to recover, the SSA may wait longer to conduct a review. When conducting a continuing disability review, the SSA will request information similar to the information required as part of the initial application. For this reason, it is important that you continue to seek medical treatment and keep copies of all medical records.

The SSA will discontinue a person’s benefits if they are no longer disabled or earning “substantial gainful activity.”

 ***************************************************************************

For more information about applying for SSD benefits with Crohn’s Disease, please visit this page, Crohn’s Disease and Social Security Disability.

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Invisible Effects of Crohn’s Disease & IBD

MAW PPP Dec 21 2012

May 22, 2013 – Please pardon the recent inconsistent entries but I have been battling a rare and unpredictable lung condition related to my Crohn’s Disease which currently limits my ability to function on “all 8s.”  In the future, I plan to invite some Guest Bloggers to share their perspectives on Managing Chronic Illness.  I am hoping things will return back to normal during the summer sometime.  Thanks for your patience.

What are “Invisible Effects” of Crohn’s & IBD?

Due to the proliferation of health care social media and the relentless efforts of various Patient Advocates, Patients and well-intending organizations like the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation (i.e., the “CCFA”), people are now generally familiar with the physical effects of Crohn’s Disease and the associated challenges it places on its patients.  To be clear, though, some use the terms “IBD,” or Inflammatory Bowel Disease, and Crohn’s Disease interchangeably, when technically IBD is a “catch-all” term for digestive diseases which have an inflammatory component.  More accurately, Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis primarily make up IBD but there are other IBD conditions.  That said, people without Crohn’s Disease or IBD never learn of the “Invisible Effects” these often pervasive diseases cause the patient to bear.  These Invisible Effects are not shared with family and friends because, for the most part, they are not “medical” and thus require the patient’s attention to “lifestyle issues” in an attempt to live life as normally as possible.  And let’s face it, who wants to hear about why a person or patient must have their Credit Cards on automatic bank account payment due to the unpredictability of emergency hospitalizations and disabling medical conditions?

 Why these “Invisible Effects” of Crohn’s and IBD are known by few

There is an almost intuitive and inherent fear amongst many Crohn’s Disease patients that friends and family would be “pushed away” if they understood what their day-to-day managing of these Invisible Effects actually entailed, almost as if the cumulative amount of the effects of Crohn’s Disease could reach a friendship or relationship “tipping point.”  After all, people by their nature want to be supportive but the conversation would always be one-sided if the loved one starts by asking the Crohn’s patient, “How are you doing?”  A Crohn’s or IBD patient couldn’t possibly accurately answer that question without touching upon these “Invisible Effects.”  The conversational standard for answering that question admittedly is superficial as the question has morphed more into a greeting than a genuine probe into a person’s well-being but therein lies the unique heretofore “silent” problems faced by Crohn’s and IBD patients.  Accordingly, I thought it would be enlightening for people who care about those with Crohn’s or IBD to see things from the patient perspective and in the process expose these “Invisible Effects” of Crohn’s Disease for the purposes of better understanding the unique but silent challenges Crohn’s and IBD patients bravely face.  I have listed many of them below with highlighted Sub-paragraph headings and succinctly elaborated beneath them where appropriate.

 The Mainstream does not truly understand the cause or triggers of Crohn’s Disease placing enormous & unwarranted guilt, pressure and emotional stress on patients and this lack of knowledge can cause devastating “Crohn’s Disease diagnosis journeys”. 

The poor education of the mainstream about the cause and treatment of Crohn’s and IBD forces patients to respond to questions or accusations related to changing a diet to “cure” Crohn’s and, worse, that they CAUSED IT with a poor diet or poor stress management skills.  Worse, some people, even some naive medical professionals, tell some Crohn’s patients prior to, and even after, diagnosis that the pain is “in your head” and not real.  Unfortunately, this “in your head” theory gets dispelled when the patient is rushed to the hospital emergency room for surgery to repair narrow bowels or twisted intestines.

For me, this happened in my early 20s and I could sense that the various doctors’ skepticism crept into the thinking of my family because, after all, nothing medical seemed to explain my extreme fatigue, abdominal pain, severe joint pain and inability to heal from common wisdom teeth dental surgery.  I even indulged my physicians’ recommendation to begin seeing a local psychologist because I wanted to find an answer to my medical problem and I knew I had to first exhaust every one of their ridiculous non-medical theories.  From my perspective, what was happening to me and my body was so palpable that I knew there had to be an underlying medical explanation.  But I knew I wouldn’t be taken seriously until I soothed the egos of the doctors treating me and eliminated each of their theories, one-by-one.

The first consensus amongst the “medical” physicians was for me to see a local psychologist to address my apparent need for attention by complaining about so many physical problems.  It’s hard for me some 30 years later to now convey how angry I was at the medical establishment for not “believing me” but I remember taking solace in my body being the best measurement of my medical condition and that it was only a matter of time for it to talk loud enough for the doctors to hear.  I lived this lie for several months after consulting with more and more doctors in and around New York City who also thought I was a hypochondriac since all superficial diagnostic tests were negative.

Mind you, my sessions with the local psychologist were a complete waste of time as he spent more time taking about my mother and father than he did on why I was feeling the way I did.  One day, however, I ate flavored popcorn at an office function of a job in New York City I had just started.  Shortly after my body started digesting the popcorn I experienced such severe pain that I ventured into the bathroom and locked the door.  To this day, I have no idea why I chose the bathroom for refuge but I imagine the stomach pain was so severe that I anticipated painful digestive repercussions.  The next thing I remember was waking up in an ambulance on my way to the local hospital.  The pain was so severe that it trumped the office embarrassment of getting so sick and needing help from people I barely knew and to this day I’m not sure if I ever went back to that office or thanked those kind people who looked out for my safety.  If for some odd reason I neglected to thank them, I hope they are reading this for that experience changed my life.

A few days later the attending gastroenterologist (GI) came into my room and showed me the results of some diagnostic tests which revealed I had something called “Crohn’s Disease.”  I had never heard of it so he handed me some informative brochures published by the CCFA.  As I read the brochures, each paragraph empowered me more and more as it described EXACTLY what I had been experiencing the past few months including the abdominal pain, extreme lethargy, joint pain and inability to heal properly from a common medical/dental procedure such as the extraction of all four (4) wisdom teeth.  As if on cue from a movie as I was contemplating my future with this new sidekick, a few minutes later the phone rang in my hospital room and it was the local psychologist I had been seeing.  He apparently obtained the phone number from my Mom when I failed to show up for two (2) consecutively weekly appointments (I was hospitalized for almost three [3] weeks).  He first appropriately inquired as to the status of my health and conveyed his well wishes for a speedy recovery but then he uttered the following words which changed my life: “Michael, do you see what you did to yourself now?

I hung up on the local psychologist, actually I slammed the phone down while the psychologist was still speaking, and in doing so acquired the beginning of the confidence I would need to cope with my Crohn’s Disease as it got more severe in my 30s and 40s (I obviously still had much to learn about the composure part).  My family’s confidence in my coping abilities followed soon thereafter.  They had temporarily “abandoned” my logic in “listening to my body” although they never gave up on “supporting me” except they chose to follow what the doctors were saying instead of my body’s reaction to the situation.  I couldn’t blame them as they couldn’t “feel” what I was feeling and they were heeding the advice of experienced medical professionals.   Besides, they never stopped loving me so what beef could I possibly have with them?  None.

This was my “Crohn’s diagnosis journey” and thankfully it was relatively short in time duration but it took me through some VERY depressed periods where I knew even my family and friends doubted me.  I was also acutely aware that if I was wrong in trusting my body I was likely going to be labeled a hypochondriac and attention-seeker for the rest of my life and risk never being taken seriously again.  Well, MANY Crohn’s patients experience much longer “diagnosis journeys” and their self-confidence is tested even more than mine was.  This “Crohn’s diagnosis journey” is a situation which still exists due to the mainstream’s poor understanding of Crohn’s and IBD.   For many people, particularly those who reside in rural areas where doctors see a minimal number of Crohn’s cases and thus are not as sharp in spotting it especially when it is a complex Crohn’s case seemingly masked as some other more obvious disease, obtaining a correct diagnosis of Crohn’s or IBD can be a tortuous, time-consuming, expensive and emotionally devastating process.

But you look so good?

Crohn’s itself has been described as an “Invisible Illness” because the patient’s superficial appearance can have nothing to do with his or her internal intestinal health.  I’ve tried to train friends and family that how I look often has nothing to do with how I feel but human nature being what it is; people tend to believe what they SEE and not what they HEAR.  I have lost friendships over this issue after I’ve socialized with them on a Friday night only to have to cancel on their child’s Bar-Mitzvah on a Sunday due to an unexpected disabling Crohn’s flare-up.   People sometimes don’t trust that which they can’t understand and if many doctors don’t truly understand Crohn’s, I’ve come to understand that this can happen even with friends and family.  That said, over time I have developed a circle of close friends who understand when I don’t or can’t attend something.   Strangely, this Invisible Effect of Crohn’s has weeded out superficial and narcissistic friends and has become somewhat like “x-ray vision” into providing me with perspective into the quality of people I encounter.  Still, this has affected some former very close friendships of mine simply because Crohn’s can be an “Invisible Illness” and sometimes I wish there was an objective way to communicate sincerity.  I maintain this same position with respect to an objective scale for levels of Pain such that a doctor could understand my Pain and treat me accordingly.

Lack of Consistency in Personal and Professional Lives.  

A main characteristic about Crohn’s Disease is that it is “consistently inconsistent” and that makes planning ANYTHING a risky proposition. In business, this can ruin relationships especially in an economy where patience is no longer an option.  In personal relationships, the need to cancel on cheerful events too many times could force the Crohn’s patient to the back of the address invite book until they finally are no longer called to participate in such events as the former friend simply assumes their “Yes” or “No” can’t be counted upon.  As mentioned above, however, as I matured Crohn’s Disease eventually gave me laser-like perspective about who was and wasn’t a true friend for frequently cancelling on attending birthday parties and weddings should not equal a friendship-ending foul.

Doctors always having a “crutch” when a seemingly unrelated medical problem isn’t easily diagnosed. 

Once a doctor knows you have Crohn’s Disease, it has been my experience that they can stop searching for answers to certain medical problems which are difficult to diagnose.  They blame Crohn’s Disease when with other patients they might probe further.  This is medically dangerous and disrespectful to a Crohn’s Disease patient.  After all, if a man in a wheelchair came in to see a doctor complaining of kidney stone-type pain, I would hope that doctor wouldn’t blame the immobility of being in a wheelchair.  In the case of a Crohn’s patient, a very common referral for any ailment is to a Rheumatologist due to the predominant Crohn’s characteristic being the patient’s autoimmune issues and compromised immune system.  Oftentimes, however, Crohn’s patients know their bodies better than new doctors do and if a patient thinks he or she has a kidney stone and has a history of such, I would hope the doctor would refer the patient to a urologist instead of a rheumatologist but a Crohn’s patient may have to advocate in a vigilant manner for that to happen.  In summary, the Crohn’s or IBD patient must also be his or her own Patient Advocate when seeing medical professionals about new ailments because too often is the case when they are referred to a rheumatologist due to their compromised immune system.

Getting treated by non-GI doctors and having to explain why you might need stronger or longer antibiotics due to your weak immune system. 

Some new doctors or physicians you are not familiar with don’t want to believe the unique medical effects of your Crohn’s Disease which you are all too familiar with having lived with the disease for many years.  So when you suggest a stronger antibiotic or longer course of antibiotic based on your prior experience, they often refuse to give Crohn’s its due deference.  This is like a doctor prescribing additional aerobic exercise to a patient who has a history of asthma and ignoring the patent’s input about his or her inability to do any more exercise as a result of its effects on his or her ability to breathe.  In the asthma case, doctors listen so why are the unique medical effects of Crohn’s Disease often overlooked by doctors?

Side Effects from Biologics.

Over the past few years, researchers have identified a common vulnerability in Crohn’s Disease patients which causes their immune system to attack THEMSELVES when they should be attacking the outside abnormality such as Allergies, the Flu, etc.  This created a form of potent drugs which, when successful, often puts Crohn’s Disease into Remission for relatively long periods of time. These drugs are Remicade, Humira, Cimzia and Tysabri.  While these drugs do help MANY patients, they also can cause serious and frequent side effects in patients such as Cancer, lethal Fungal Lung Infections and other serious to severe Respiratory Conditions.  Not everyone who takes these drugs is vulnerable to these side effects, but one can reasonably opine that it seems the FDA underestimated the severity and frequency of these side effects when they approved these drugs for usage in treating Crohn’s Disease.

As a result, the FDA has subsequently issued “Black Box Warnings” on these drugs, primarily on Humira and Cimzia, which require the manufacturers to CLEARLY list on the drug’s packaging that the drug has, and can, cause such lethal side effects. In full disclosure, I am a patient who is suffering from a severe lung infection which the Pathology Department at the Mayo Clinic has been unable to define and which in the past has required me to undergo chemotherapy to save my life.  I can’t “prove” this strange and possible lethal lung infection came from Humira or Cimzia (both of which I took for my Crohn’s) BUT when one of the world’s most prominent health institutions writes in a Pathology Report after a surgical lung biopsy that they can’t specifically identify the source or name of the obvious harmful lung problem, it is a logical leap to assume this had to be caused by the Biologics since nothing else in my life has changed.

The FDA felt the increasing need to convey the importance of these Black Box Warnings and took to YouTube in an attempt to reach the most Crohn’s patients since many were being passively influenced by the TV Commercials for the drug Humira which in the first 15 seconds of its TV commercial VISUALLY highlights the potential lifestyle changing effects of taking the drug but in the remaining 15 or 30 seconds uses a “mechanical” and monotonous VOICE-OVER technique to convey the legally required SIDE EFFECTS.  Accordingly, the Humira TV commercial is approximately 1/3 advertisement and 2/3 Legal Disclaimer.

But trying to take an objective perspective, I fear the incurability of Crohn’s Disease combined with the FACT that these Biologics do help MANY people created an environment whereby the FDA approved the drugs probably prematurely because they figured if it helps many people “get back their life” even at the expense of several others experiencing disabling side effects, it was a worthwhile trade-off.  However, the FDA’s subsequent increased vigilance in informing the public about the seriousness and frequency of these side effects seems to indicate that increased Patient Data and History is possibly making the FDA rethink their original position I’ve articulated above.  Contrarily, over recent years the FDA has been successfully lobbied by the manufacturers of Humira, namely Abbott Industries, to expand the application of Humira to Pediatric Crohn’s Disease (in Europe) and to Ulcerative Colitis in the US.  It is a convoluted situation which helps many Crohn’s patients and disables some or many others.

While Biologics seem to be the last line of defense for many Crohn’s patients, I pray it works for them.  However, there are other researchers pursuing different underlying pathologies which would result in drugs which might make Biologics extinct.  Only time will tell. Alternatively, it is also possible that the manufacturers of Biologics will “refine” their drugs to mitigate the aforementioned severity and frequency of their side effects.  The takeaway from this sub-paragraph is that even the lifestyle-saving or remission-inducing Crohn’s and IBD Biologic treatment drugs come at a controversial cost which is still not entirely understood.  That said, if I were a patient with no options but Humira, having exhausted all other treatment options, I would want to be enthusiastic and positive about the drug’s chances to help me.  But if this type of Crohn’s patient were being fair, he or she couldn’t honestly take such a position although they MUST.  I wish that weren’t the case but that is what Crohn’s and IBD patients must deal with and I think the public and mainstream is unaware of how brave these types of Crohn’s and IBD patients must be.

Automatized Credit Card payment schedule.

Years ago when I was in and out of hospitals with the same frequency and unpredictability as Lady Gaga’s wardrobe changes, I was always late on paying my credit cards and had to pay a $25.00 late fee after being late more than 2 or 3 times on paying any one credit card.  Having Credit was and is vital to my survival since I always need a credit card to host medical debt which surpasses my liquidity.  To preserve that Credit, I was forced to set up automatic payment mechanisms tied to a bank account.  This way all I had to do was make sure the bank account had a high enough balance at the end of the month.  This solved the credit card Late Fee problem but it limits my financial planning and liquidity.  Perhaps not a big deal to people with an overflow of money but just another thing a Crohn’s and IBD patient must attend to or risk losing the Credit he or she needs to pay for the expensive medical treatment he or she will undoubtedly require in the future.

Your Degree of Pain is always challenged and having a Pain Management Doctor can unfairly label you a drug addict or drug seeker.  

Since Crohn’s Disease has such a broad-spectrum “Severity Scale,” many medical professionals assume you are on the low end as there is no way to objectively determine how bad you are suffering and they want to protect themselves from patients with addiction problems looking to use their diagnosis of Crohn’s or IBD as a license to get narcotics every month.  Responsible pain management doctors also only want to dispense the least amount of narcotics as is necessary.  Additionally, narcotics and opioids, while helpful as painkillers, also take a serious toll on the digestive system as they slow the body’s natural process of “Peristalsis” which moves chewed items down the digestive track.  This interruption in the digestive track can complicate Crohn’s and IBD and for that reason Gastroenterologists (GIs) don’t like prescribing them.  But they are the most effective painkillers, especially when Crohn’s and IBD patients can’t take anti-inflammatory over-the-counter painkillers because they are even more abrasive on the digestive track, and without them patients with Severe Crohn’s pain would suffer in a way tantamount to cruel and unusual punishment.

Still, this reality often causes some Gastroenterologists to refuse to prescribe opioid painkillers and/or to even inform the Crohn’s patient that there exists a specialty of doctors who practice “Pain Management” responsibly. I have been outspoken on this issue because once I learned of the Pain Management specialty and found a trusted and respected Pain Management Doctor, I chose to become somewhat “dependent” on painkillers so that my Crohn’s wouldn’t keep me on the couch while my friends or family were busy making life memories on celebratory occasions.

While under the care of a duly licensed and responsible Pain Management Doctor, I have also learned of the difference between “dependence” and “addiction.”  Many Crohn’s patients become “dependent” on narcotics or opioids to maintain some semblance of a quality of life or normal lifestyle.  I chose that path for many years and I relied upon my medical professional to identify if I ever wavered into the area of “addiction” as it can be a slippery slope.  However, that is exactly why I chose to be monitored by a Pain Management physician.  I was able to do this because I was always 100% candid with my Pain Management doctor.  With such an option available for Crohn’s patients, I am ASTONISHED at the number of emails and communications I receive from Crohn’s patients around the world who tell me that their GI doctors will not address their pain, so what should they do?  My heart aches for these Crohn’s and IBD patients.

To choose Pain Management to maintain some degree of quality of life despite Severe Crohn’s Disease, the patient must sign a Contract with the doctor that requires the patient to see the doctor once a month, use the same pharmacy to obtain narcotics and to obtain narcotics only from that doctor.  It is a small price to pay for a reasonable quality of life despite severe pain.  But having to see a doctor once a month, every month, of every year, is expensive and somewhat draining on that quality of life.  I guess my business school professor was correct: “There is no free lunch in life.”

Additionally, once you become dependent on a pain management doctor, it makes relocation difficult because chronic pain patients are now looked upon with skepticism and new pain management doctors are not exactly eager to take in Crohn’s Disease patients unless they can establish their past experience with the pain management specialty through voluminous Patient Notes from their previous doctors.  Changing pain management doctors can also be required when the patient or his or her company changes health insurance companies which these days is a common annual occurrence due to pricing of health insurance plans.  Then trying to locate a new pain management doctor can become almost like a full-time job as the patient must often go through MANY “interviews” with different doctors to ensure there is a “match” between patient and doctor in terms of understanding needs, lifestyle and personalities.

In summary, Pain Management is a wonderful option for Crohn’s patients with chronic severe pain but it comes at a price which is not just financial and the patient is often stigmatized by pharmacies and hospitals as a drug addict or drug seeker when all they are doing is seeking treatment for a legitimate medical problem which in this case happens to be chronic pain.  This drug addict or drug seeker stigma attached to simply seeking relief from chronic severe pain caused by Crohn’s or IBD, can have professional, social and emotional effects upon the Crohn’s or IBD patient.  This doesn’t seem to happen to patients with diseases more typically associated with pain like Cancer but Crohn’s and IBD can be as painful as ANY disease.  Another burden to bear for the Crohn’s and IBD patient which is not often discussed.

Relationships and intimacy becomes much more difficult.

When do you bring it up?  How do you bring it up?  Should you bear children in case you are worried about “passing it on”?  Also, the financial burden that comes with MANY years of Severe Crohn’s Disease can also affect one’s “attractiveness” as it is completely fair to assume many people do not want to enter into a relationship and assume a tremendous amount of medical debt which will only increase over time.  Some might snicker at this point but life is not a love story and reality pokes its head in every now and then.  Applying that to my life, I know that several women I have dated have terminated our relationship because of this issue (even though in some instances other reasons were given at the time) and many more have unbelievably controlled themselves from my formidable charm and avoided beginning intimate relationships with me so they would not have to ultimately make that choice. :)

I JOKE about my charm and whatnot but I always had girlfriends and it wasn’t until my Crohn’s began to disable me more and more that I began to notice women taking a longer term look at our possible situation and deciding to walk away.  I NEVER got angry about it because if I were their parent I would want them to be HAPPY and whether we want to admit it or not, it is a “green world,” as my Dad often said, and without money or being in always-growing medical debt, happiness would undoubtedly be even more difficult to attain as 50% of all marriages fail as is.

A few years ago when I became disabled due to my Crohn’s, I also felt guilty about bringing a woman into a life filled with chronic sickness and ever-expanding medical debt and when evaluating the prospects of a long-term intimate relationship such as marriage, a woman has the right to know this type of information.  This is why I have dedicated my life to being a Crohn’s Disease Advocate.  I am still hopeful to meet the right woman but I realize that due to my disabling disease I might have to settle for a dog – but even owning a dog comes with financial and physical responsibilities so I’m not even sure I can do that – at least at this point in my life.  I joke but it is true.  That said, I LOVE dogs and realistically that is my goal at some point soon. :)

Chronic Temporary Disability from Work could make it difficult to keep a job. 

Not every Crohn’s patient gets disabled, but even after a bowel resection surgery, they may be on State Temporary Disability from their job.  This is something all workers are entitled to in their State but the chronic nature of Crohn’s could make this a fairly frequent event.  Before you know it, others at the company may start to look at YOU as the reason why the cost of their healthcare insurance keeps rising.  Despite provisions for protections against discrimination in the Affordable Care Act and in the American’s with Disabilities Act, companies have ways to “discriminate” without formally running afoul of these anti-discrimination or pre-existing illness laws.  This is just a reality which Crohn’s patients must be aware of as they navigate the otherwise challenging climb up the corporate ladder.

New helpful medications might be deemed “experimental” and not covered by insurance. 

If these new helpful medications are “reimbursed” by health insurance, the health insurance reimbursement may be very small.  More common is the situation when a few drugs are used, or will be used, in semi-successfully treating Crohn’s but for “off-label” purposes.  Such “off-label” usage (i.e., using a drug to treat conditions other than it was approved for by the FDA to treat) may also make health insurance reimbursement difficult.  This occurs, for example, when doctors realize that a certain drug approved by the FDA to lower cholesterol in the blood (such as the drug, “Colestid”) can be successfully used to “bind bile salts” in Crohn’s patients who have lost their Terminal Ileum.

This Colestid example happened to me several years ago when I lost my Terminal Ileum in a surgery and as a result was unable to digest “fats” and “bind bile salts.”  The practical result was that I was in the bathroom 30-40 times a day with relentless diarrhea until my genius New York City Crohn’s Doctor told me to “TRY” 4-5 Colestid tablets a day.  Remarkably, the diarrhea STOPPED and I was able to resume my lifestyle outside of the bathroom but not before having to appeal my health insurance company’s decision to decline reimbursing me for the cost of the Colestid because I was taking it for “off-label” purposes.  I had to appeal FIVE (5) separate times until the insurance company relented but this happens almost every time a Crohn’s patient has similar success with an “off-label”  drug.  You’d think the health insurance company would be supportive from a “Wellness” perspective but as my Dad used to say, “it’s a green world.”  This is an ongoing problem which Crohn’s and IBD patients will face as researchers and doctors continually search for better treatments with fewer side effects and ultimately, and hopefully, a cure.

Accumulated medical costs of a chronic Crohn’s Disease patient may cause financial problems which warrant bankruptcy-level solutions yet there is no state or federal bankruptcy protection “classification” for patients with chronic diseases they contracted due to them being passed down genetically through their family (as opposed to Lung Cancer they might have contracted from 30 years of smoking).

Constant extreme lethargy may be interpreted by family and friends as you being a “slacker” –

when it is simply your Crohn’s affecting you after being triggered by the environment, eating a certain food, allergies or just “because.” I feel guilty when all I can do on a given day is lie on the couch and flip through the TV channels but that’s how it is for Severe Crohn’s and IBD patients on many days – in-between bathroom trips.  When this happens frequently, some people may think you enjoy being a slacker but they have no idea of the frustration Crohn’s patients have deep down inside of not being able to regularly contribute to society.  Friends and family may start to wonder because the stark comparison between you healthy as opposed to you sick is frustrating to them.  Since you often can’t predict when these helpless days will occur, friends and family can become equally frustrated.  This then becomes a heavy burden to bear for the Crohn’s patient because we know our loved ones have the best of intentions but they begin to get frustrated by our disease as much as we do except they don’t “feel” the overwhelming tide of lethargy and therefore they apply logic to try and understand Crohn’s and that simply won’t work as science has not yet figured it out.   As Musician and Master Story-Teller Tom Petty wrote and sang in his song “Refugee:” “It’s just one of those things you gotta to feel to be true.”    

Family and Friends may not visit in the Hospital because they assume you’ve been hospitalized so much that “he can handle it” –

yet we all get lonely in the hospital and doing time in a hospital never gets easier.  As I get older I come across this more and more.  I never judge who comes or doesn’t come to visit me in the hospital other than evaluating my own needs for company and a diversion from the loneliness and pain.  That said, I am always appreciative of whoever comes to see me or call me when I am hospitalized.  But I do get upset at the thought people assume I can “handle it” because I have been hospitalized over 200 times.  Being a hospital patient is NEVER easy regardless of great nurses and compassionate physicians.  If these people only knew that being a patient in a hospital is closer to being a prisoner in a jail than to anything else then maybe they would appreciate the isolation, loneliness and fear one feels when they are lying in a hospital bed in pain with tubes coming out of every orifice.  I don’t wish it on anyone but I don’t know how else to convey to family members that just hearing the VOICE of a loved one is comforting inside a hospital even if you have a tube down your throat and can’t talk.

The side effects of the typical successful Crohn’s medications like Prednisone can be so serious –

they can affect your social and professional lives (i.e., moonfaced) and cause serious medical problems later on in life such as Hip Replacement. Additionally, immuno-suppressant drugs such as Imuran and 6-mercaptopurine (6MP) can have LETHAL long-term effects causing Cancer and Liver disease. Crohn’s patients must live with the harsh reality that in many instances the most successful treatment can cause external and internal medical problems which are as bad as or worse than Crohn’s itself.  If this doesn’t convey the almost barbaric scientific manner in which Crohn’s and IBD are treated, I don’t know what else will convey this “treatment can be worse than the disease” risk which all Crohn’s and IBD patients must assume.  This is not a criticism of the medical profession or medical professional; it is just an observation about the slow scientific process being made in treating and curing Crohn’s and IBD.

Obtaining Social Security Disability can be more difficult because the potential seriousness of Crohn’s Disease is not well-understood by the Mainstream. 

Accordingly, if you can’t work because of being disabled by Crohn’s, you sometimes have to wait 3-5 YEARS to finally prevail in Court after having to hire an attorney and giving up a large percentage to him or her for the cost of their helpful legal services.  This varies from State-to-State but I hear too many stories of people with Severe Crohn’s or IBD being denied and denied despite having voluminous medical proof almost as if the Social Security office thinks the Crohn’s patient will give up after a while.  I have also heard of stories where patients with Crohn’s are awarded Social Security Disability Benefits only to have them taken away when their case is reviewed in a few years which then re-starts the nightmarish cycle of re-application for Social Security Disability Benefits.

If you do become Disabled or Limited in your work capacity, certain family members may look at you as never having reached your potential and a strange family dynamic may be created despite them having had just as much of a genetic chance of having contracted Crohn’s as you did.   

This is the familial effect of Crohn’s and IBD because through no fault of your own and “but for the Grace of God there go I,” it could have happened to any one of your siblings – you just drew the unlucky genetic card.  This unfair familial judgment doesn’t happen within every family with a Severe Crohn’s or IBD patient.  It also can manifest itself differently with each family but it definitely happens and it is due most likely to human nature and to the Severe Crohn’s or IBD patient “looking fine” but being disabled.  This “judgment” can permeate what should be celebratory family functions such as Anniversaries, Christmas, Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, etc. but instead the Crohn’s patient comes to despise family functions because they feel they are being judged by people who could have just as easily been in their position.  This explains why many Crohn’s patients get depressed during holiday season.  Perhaps some of the intensity of the familiar effect is in the minds of Crohn’s patients but due to the genetic nature of having contracted Crohn’s there is logic behind a certain kind of weirdness taking place when getting together with siblings who could have just as easily been the family member who contracted the Severe case of Crohn’s.

Your values in life change as “Happiness” is now defined by the ability to SMILE and be PAIN-FREE as opposed to using that Tax Refund to go on a 10-day trip to Europe.

Traveling with Crohn’s Disease can be laborious and frightening.

While traveling, your worst nightmare can come true if you have a flare-up in a rural area where medical professionals don’t see many Crohn’s Disease cases.  Nevertheless, you must prepare for such an event and that makes packing for travel rather arduous. With the best of intentions these foreign medical professionals could treat you in a textbook manner (e.g., Prednisone or straight to Biologics) when what you might need is less intense medications or simple Intravenous Fluids for a few days or other medications which you take at home but which might not be so well-known in those parts of the world or they might not be so well known in terms of their application to treating Crohn’s disease. Suffice it to say, the guy who chases “River Monsters” on the “Animal Planet” Cable-TV channel, namely, Jeremy Wade, does not have Crohn’s Disease!

Hiring a Mental Health Professional is challenging. 

It is hard to find one who can relate to the unique challenges of the chronic Severe Crohn’s patient and it is difficult to afford paying them when you can’t work and earn money.  Otherwise, support to cope with all of the above is thankfully a bit easier now more than ever before due to health care social media which people use to connect with each other to “relate” to one another about symptoms and treatments.  Crohn’s patients, or “Crohnies,” as they are often referred to on-line, also join Virtual Patient Communities and participate in helpful TweetChats.  Still, there are so many Invisible and Visible “issues” for the Crohn’s or IBD patient to discuss with the Mental Health Professional, where does one start?

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WATCH 3/21/13 IBD Round Table Discussion

Last night, March 21, 2013, at 9:00 PM EST, Frank Garufi, Jr. complied a “Round Table” of Four (4) people who he perceived to be amongst the leading Patient Advocacy voices for Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), Crohn’s Disease and Colitis.  Frank is an incredibly dedicated and well-educated IBD Father to an 8-year old boy who was diagnosed with Crohn’s when he was approximately two (2) months old.  Since then, Frank has been on a crusade to educate himself as best and as quickly as possible so that he could be as helpful to his son as possible, both NOW and in the FUTURE.

As part of Frank’s crusade, he occupies that crucial IBD, Crohn’s and Colitis space in Google+ which many of us Advocates have yet to master.  To that end, Frank was kind enough to include me, Michael A. Weiss, in this 4-person Panel of Advocates and I was honored for that consideration.  However, I was even more humbled during the almost 2-hour IBD Round Table because I was sharing the Round Table with these Inspiring and Brave Advocates:  Christina Matthies  , Sara Ringer  and Sarah Choueiry.

What we Discussed and Addressed

We each came at the thoughtful and provoking questions and IBD issues posed by Frank from different perspectives, lifestyles and ages but we all seemed to be  opining from similar severity “spectrums” in terms of our respective IBD diseases.  That diversity resulted in a non-stop engaging discourse on all things IBD, Crohn’s and Colitis including, but not limited to, ramifications of Advocacy, opinions on how to best raise awareness of Crohn’s Disease and IBD, pain management’s role in treating the disease, how best to navigate the healthcare system to obtain the best treatment, the myriad of medical decisions which must be made by the IBD patient while compromised physically and emotionally during a hospital visit, how best to communicate with doctors, how best to offer support to fellow “Crohnies” or other IBD patients, the journey to a correct diagnosis, managing the financial woes which often accompany the chronic and expensive nature of Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD and its diagnostic tests, treatments and drugs and addressing the potentially disabling nature of these autoimmune disease.

The Therapeutic Value in candid IBD discourse

In discussing these issues, succinctly designed by Frank Garufi, Jr., we also interacted with one another in a way which I think demonstrates the broad range of coping skills one needs to successfully manage these life-altering diseases.  I think we also demonstrated the therapeutic value in TALKING about the multifaceted aspects of IBD, Crohn’s and Colitis.  Simply being able to “relate” to another IBD patient or “Crohnie” going through the same experiences left me feeling incredibly positive about future developments in IBD, Crohn’s and Colitis Patient Engagement.  If I felt that way simply discussing my disease experiences with 4 other people, I hope YOU will see how empowered that can be when YOU do the same, whether in a health care social medium platform, a virtual patient community like Crohnology.com or in real life with a close friend, colleague or loved one.

Please Comment & Pose Questions for Next Month’s IBD Round Table

If you have IBD, Crohn’s or Colitis, or love someone who does, PLEASE watch this Video, or at least watch parts of it.  Please also note that this IBD Round Table Discussion will now be a MONTHLY EVENT on Google+.  The time and date of the next one will soon be announced and I will certainly pass it along to you.  To that end, your comments and questions are WELCOMED so that we may address them when we reconvene.  Thanks.

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Incredibly Generous Volunteer Response to Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol

As most of you know, we launched the Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol a few weeks ago and the Volunteer Response from ACROSS the US and beyond has been INSPIRING.  It’s incredible how such a simple idea evokes the generous spirit to help other patients going through what you’ve already experienced.  Crohn’s Disease “Warriors” have signed up to volunteer for the Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol from Hawaii, Alaska, Oregon, Seattle, Cleveland, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Wyoming, Ontario, Canada, Brazil, New York, Long Island, Los Angeles, San Francisco and all places in-between.  Please consider SIGNING UP or SUPPORTING US.  Thanks.

Below are short REAL “testimonials” which demonstrate the PASSION of these selfless Volunteers who make up the Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol.

I am constantly learning about myself through this disease and others with it.  If I can be of help to anyone and experience other IBDers, what a gift! – Honolulu, Hawaii

I have wanted to help others for many years now and this would be perfect!  Landsdale, PA

I feel that there is a need for this type of help to talk to patients facing a new diagnosis of IBD and Ostomy.  I would love to help in any way I could.  Mobile, Alabama

I would love to share my experiences or just listen to others vent or talk it out. Just be there because I understand & have been through most of it.  Bethpage, NY

So glad that I ran across this new program.  My CCFA support group just discussed how awesome it would be to be able to visit newly-diagnosed IBD patients, even in the hospital, as most have never heard of it and are likely “freaking out” about their diagnosis.  Niles, MI

I feel this is such a great program for people that are scared and alone in the hospital. Even if they aren’t alone, it’s of paramount importance that they talk to someone with this disease-at least that’s my opinion. Doctors and nurses can only empathize to a degree.  Greensburg, PA

Would like to sign up to be a Warrior and help those worse off than me!  Bridgewater, NJ

I would be willing to be a Crohn’s Disease Warrior (“CDW”) and visit hospitalized patients. There are a lot of us IBD’ers here. If I can help, please let me know :)   Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

I am very seasoned & qualified to do visits to new patients. Please let me know if I can help.  Central Michigan

I would like to go and visit Crohn’s patients in the hospital.  Fort Collins, CO but I could also visit between Cheyenne, WY, and Denver, CO.

I would Love nothing more than to give back and take even an ounce of degradation/humiliation from a fellow Chron-ee and prove it WiLL be alright!! I have been looking for a program exactly like this and I HoPE that I can help in any way!! Los Angeles, CA

I would be happy to visit, support, run errands for anyone in the hospital.  San Francisco, CA

I am a 38 year old Crohn’s patient, diagnosed 10 years ago and live in the Seattle area. First I would like to thank you for such an awesome idea! I have spent many nights in the ER or hospital room, alone and honestly I can’t even imagine being a child going through this!  Seattle, WA

I’d be happy to share my story with people recently diagnosed or ongoing patients so that they can see there is “life” with Crohn’s. It’s not always easy but I’ve learned that attitude goes a long way!  Long Island, NY

I have visited Crohn’s patients in the hospital many times to help them before or after a surgery. Just to be there to listen, talk, teach, cry – whatever it took to let them know they are not alone.  Cleveland, OH

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MAW PPP Dec 21 2012

Formal Launch of Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol (“CDWP”)

Media Inquiries – Please contact me, Michael A. Weiss, as I am the Founder and Executive Director of the Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol.  The best way to reach me is via emailing me at Michael@CrohnsPatientPatrol.org or sending me a DM Tweet  @HospitalPatient.  Thank you.

In short, the “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol” (the “CDWP”) is a NON-PROFIT “Patient Visitor Ambassador Program” which MATCHES veteran Inflammatory Bowel Disease (“IBD”) Patient “Warriors” with “local” Crohn’s, Colitis & IBD “Patients-in-Need” to offer much-needed “Tender Loving Care” (“TLC”).   The entire CDWP Project and Non-Profit Charitable Foundation is explained ABOVE in the MedStartr.com Video/Description.  PLEASE click-thru to learn more about the CDWP.

BTW – It is called the “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol” simply because that is what I have been suffering from for almost 30 years but the CDWP ALSO caters to the Colitis, Ulcerative Colitis and IBD communities.  I had to come up with a NAME and ….  I hope all you Colitis, UC and IBD patients understand.  :)  

PLEASE SIGNUP to be a Patient Warrior or Patient-in-Need at the CDWP Website.

PLEASE SUPPORT the CDWP by clicking thru to the MedStartr.com Project.  Thank you.

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PITY does not breed Crohn’s Disease, Colitis or IBD Global Awareness

CCFA Blog Entry

Oh no, a Public Bathroom Stall – CCFA’s “Escape The Stall” Campaign

The above picture is from the latest well-intended NEW Crohn’s Disease, Colitis and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (“IBD”) Mainstream Awareness Campaign from the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America (the “CCFA”) which has me SO disappointed, annoyed, angry and insulted that I’m up at 4 AM on a Sunday morning when I should be resting getting ready for the New England Patriots-Baltimore Ravens AFC Championship Game, given that I am a life-long Pats fan and I just turned 50 last week.  But some, not many things, are more important to me than the New England Patriots (my fandom is actually a way in which I deal with the frustrations and limitations of being disabled by Crohn’s Disease after 30 years battling the beast) and one of them is how Crohn’s Disease is perceived by the WORLD.  This is why I chose the above picture from the CCFA website depicting the possibility that a Clown can have IBD because it completes the bizarre circular reasoning of the CCFA and makes this DEBACLE of an attempt to educate the mainstream into a complete f’n joke.  Sorry, I call it, as I see it.  It is also an insult to the MANY Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD patients who suffer endlessly and somehow persevere despite seemingly never-ending obstacles that seem to only graduate to the worst possible case scenario.

 Who’s gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinburg?

So who really represents these Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD patients with key research and funding organizations now that we have CONFIRMED the CCFA is ill-equipped to devise an accurate Global Mainstream Awareness Campaign?  In answering that question, I am forced to quote a classic scene from the memorable 1992 movie directed by Rob Reiner, “A Few Good Men:”

 Col. Jessep (Jack Nicholson) : *You want answers?*
Kaffee (Tom Cruise): *I want the truth!*
Col. Jessep: *You can’t handle the truth!*
[pauses]
Col. Jessep: Son, we live in a world that has walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with guns. Who’s gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinburg? (played by the incomparable Kevin Pollak) I have a greater responsibility than you could possibly fathom. You weep for Santiago, and you curse the Marines. You have that luxury. You have the luxury of not knowing what I know. That Santiago’s death, while tragic, probably saved lives. And my existence, while grotesque and incomprehensible to you, saves lives. You don’t want the truth because deep down in places you don’t talk about at parties, you want me on that wall, you need me on that wall. We use words like honor, code, loyalty. We use these words as the backbone of a life spent defending something. You use them as a punch line. I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very freedom that I provide, and then questions the manner in which I provide it. I would rather you just said thank you, and went on your way, Otherwise, I suggest you pick up a weapon, and stand a post. Either way, I don’t give a damn what you think you are entitled to.

That’s right, Lt. Weinberg and the actor/comic/impressionist Kevin Pollack will now have to pick up the slack caused by the ineptness of the CCFA.

My Sister being thankful things are not worse – until they ALWAYS are w/ Crohn’s Disease

A funny interlude here is my true story of growing up as an adult with Severe Crohn’s Disease and having one of my loving sisters ALWAYS calling me in the hospital with the most genuine concern for my well-being but always saying something to the effect of, “Thank God, things could be worse, you could need surgery and lose more of your  intestine or you could be in the hospital for weeks.”  Well, in an wicked twist of fate, despite my sister’s sweet and sincere prayers for me to get better, that “worst case scenario” would almost always occur in a matter of days. It became so frequent that whenever I was hospitalized during any 1 of the 200+ times, I would ask her to NEVER repeat those well-intended words.  We laugh about it today but THAT IS Crohn’s Disease.   I’ve had so many surgeries, been on so many medications and even had to go on Chemotherapy in 2011 to SAVE MY LIFE after I developed a Severe and RARE Lung Condition from a “miracle” Crohn’s Disease drug.  And I’m a lucky Severe Crohn’s Disease patient as so many people aged anywhere from 5 to 90 have suffered much more than I from BOTH the disease and the so-called medications which apparently treat but don’t cure the disease.

Pity & Pubic Bathroom Stall Doors don’t motivate people to HELP

With this in mind and in my humble opinion, the CCFA has AGAIN failed MISERABLY in trying to help us Crohnies and IBDers by yet again putting the focus of their well-intended efforts on a BATHROOM STALL DOOR and using PITY to play directly into the public’s overall perception of the less serious stigmatizing aspects of these chronic, incurable, autoimmune and often VERY painful diseases which can, and do, DESTROY lives (and families) physically, mentally, psychologically, financially, professionally and socially.  Healthy people want to help their fellow citizens who seriously struggle after they do all they can to fight through their respective adversity.  That’s why we see the country coming together during the terrible Tornadoes, Hurricanes and Super-storm Sandy tragic Events.  Does anyone think that the image of a Public Bathroom Stall Door will elicit sympathy or encouragement from people?  Does anyone remotely familiar with the possible effects of Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD want a Public Bathroom Stall Door representing the severity of their experiences?

Worse, this “Escape The Stall” Slogan is an INSULT to the BRAVE people who battle these often HORRIFIC diseases EVERY DAY. To that end, and I have written this MANY times before and it is why I am launching the “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol,” because I believe veteran Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD patients offer the most help and hope to current patients facing difficult flare-ups, hospitalizations and decisions about surgeries, medications and overall treatment than the CCFA can EVER DO.  But the NATIONAL CCFA needs to focus on educating the mainstream public about the seriousness of these diseases of which the bathroom stall plays just one of MANY aspects.

Thank you Amy Brenneman and CCFA Local Chapters & Volunteers

Please let me preface the above, although that might have been more effective if I actually posted this paragraph before my rant above, but my issue is with the paid executives at the NATIONAL CCFA offices who are responsible for this GRAVE mistake and not with the beautifully, talented, elegant, courageous actress, Amy Brenneman, who essentially lends her formidable credibility to “front” this Cause. I am SO THANKFUL to Ms. Brenneman for lending her substantial credibility to this Cause just as I am eternally grateful to the numerous local CCFA chapter volunteers and low-paid executives around the WORLD who work tirelessly to find a cure for Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD.  But when the SLOGAN for the current campaign is predicated on spreading the word in Social Media to “Escape the Stall” in an attempt to somehow convey the pain and anguish of Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD, the executives at the NATIONAL CCFA offices have demonstrated that they are out of touch with their patient population.

What does Man on the Street think about Crohn’s Disease

In my business travels when I was healthy enough to travel extensively, and even now when I am asked to speak at various Health Care Conferences, I have purposely asked numerous strangers like English-speaking intelligent taxi-drivers and engaging waiters in restaurants about Crohn’s Disease and they look at me as if to say, “I’m not sure, but isn’t that the ‘disorder” you see on TV where the women is frantically searching for a bathroom because she’s afraid she will crap in her pants on a date or at a business meeting?”  WTF!!!!!  If Mainstream Awareness has been the objective, doesn’t that mean that the CCFA has been FAILING for all of these years????

Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD are DEADLY SERIOUS and using PITY and hiding behind a Public Bathroom Stall Door does not make for a very effective Global Awareness Campaign

Thankfully, for some people with Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD they face only minor hindrances in their lives but for MANY or MOST it is a HORRIFIC DISEASE which can forever alter lives.  It can turn frustrated but kind, compassionate doctors against patients because often they have no conclusive scientific proof from which to make a diagnosis and formulate a treatment plan so they then suspect it’s in the patient’s mind because the diagnostic tests just don’t explain the existence or severity of the patient’s pain and in turn that affects how family members view a loved one in pain who has little explanation for suffering and virtually no options for an effective treatment that doesn’t actually make the suffering worse in other parts of the body.  This is just a “bonus” of these diseases and it  naturally occurs until a patient is properly diagnosed and that can take months or years, in many instances.  Did I mention all the other potentially horrific symptoms, side effects, treatments, pain, expenses, etc.?  And the CCFA picked a Public Bathroom Stall Door to portray this seriousness?  Really?

The “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol” 

I don’t profess to be Lt. Weinburg or Kevin Pollak but I admire the cutting-edge work Mr. Pollak is now doing in the Entertainment Business and it has inspired me to start this “Patrol” of veteran “Warrior” Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD patients sharing their knowledge and experience with current patients going through a rough time with Crohn’s, Colitis or IBD either in the hospital or at home.  At its core, it’s a Hospital/Patient Visitor Ambassador Program but it will evolve into a Global Support Group powered by Health Care Social Media.  From personal experience, I know that I have gained much need “Perspective” when a veteran Crohn’s/IBD “Warrior” took the time to impart some words of wisdom to me.  Also, my longtime New York City Gastroenterologist Dr. Mark Chapman has also played an enormous role in helping me adjust to each new adversity thrown at me by my Crohn’s Disease.  Through it all I’ve learned that veteran patients helping another patient is truly the best medicine when it comes to tricky cases of Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD.  I applaud the CCFA for their intentions and efforts but I don’t like their means as I find them woefully inadequate, ineffective, poorly designed and out-of-date.

Perhaps this ridiculous CCFA campaign of “Escape the Stall” has provided me with even more impetus to spread my message of the “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol” as fast as I can because Crohn’s, Colitis and IBD patients are suffering and the CCFA is not helping them/us the way they could be.  Things happen for a reason and there are Lt. Weinburgs standing by to save the day for the Tom Cruises, whether they like it or not.  Sometimes life calls on certain ordinary people to set into motion extraordinary things.   Stay tuned.

 Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol

 @CrohnsIBDPatrol

 CrohnsDiseaseWarriorPatrol@gmail.com

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MAW PPP Banner Jan 18 2013

Announcing “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol”

In one of my favorite “West Wing” episodes, (Season 2, December 20, 2000, 32 Noël), the White House Chief of Staff character Leo McGarry (played by the late John Spencer) tells White House Deputy Chief of Staff character Josh Lyman (played by Bradley Whitford) the following story as he tries to help him address his Post-Traumatic Stress symptoms from a shooting he was badly injured in:

This guy’s walking down the street when he falls in a hole. The walls are so steep he can’t get out.

A doctor passes by and the guy shouts up, ‘Hey you. Can you help me out?’ The doctor writes a prescription, throws it down in the hole and moves on.

Then a priest comes along and the guy shouts up, ‘Father, I’m down in this hole can you help me out?’ The priest writes out a prayer, throws it down in the hole and moves on.

Then a friend walks by, ‘Hey, Joe, it’s me can you help me out?’ And the friend jumps in the hole.

Our guy says, ‘Are you stupid? Now we’re both down here.’

The friend Joe says, ‘Yeah, but I’ve been down here before and I know the way out.’”

Being hospitalized for ANY chronic illness or condition can be a lonely and depressing situation.  Since Crohn’s Disease and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (collectively referred to as “IBD”) can result in repeated, painful, emotionally exhaustive, unpredictable and difficult hospitalizations, the IBD hospital experience can be intensified to the point where the patient feels like a lonely, pin-pricked, Leper.  As if that isolated and ostracizing feeling isn’t enough, the IBD hospital patient must also often cope with a very uncomfortable “NG tube” forced down his/her nose to alleviate the intense abdominal pain and he or she must move around tied to a pole from which hangs a heavy machine which pumps medication and nutrition through his or her veins.  It’s happened to me over two-hundred (200) times in my 30 years with Crohn’s Disease so I know how physically, mentally and emotionally challenging it can be despite wonderful visits from friends and family.

Many people and organizations with the sincerest of intentions profess to want to “help you through the hospital experience,” but as we all know, and as demonstrated by the “West Wing” story above, nothing can substitute for that “normal feeling” you get, when you are visited in the hospital by someone who’s been, where you are.  That’s what gave me the idea for the “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol.”

The “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol” will be a Charitable Endeavor matching interested Crohn’s Disease and IBD Patient “Warriors” with interested local hospitalized IBD Patients to provide them with comfort, experience, personal patient stories, a hug, a smile, a laugh and an overall cheerful hospital visit to let them know we are in this fight TOGETHER.  It is a technology-powered grass-roots “IBD Patient Movement.”

There is much to be done to set the “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol” into motion but like anything that truly makes a difference, it starts with small steps, dedicated people and some generous benefactors.  In that regard, I have set-up the temporary website at www.crohnsdiseasewarriorpatrol.org and will have my Web Designer Extraordinaire soon refine it so that Patients and Warriors can be matched by zip code, and information can flow freely and safely.  There will also be informative content on the site, and in the process of facilitating Crohn’s Disease patients helping other Crohn’s Disease patients, I hope to raise Global Awareness about Crohn’s Disease and Inflammatory Bowel Disease.  I’m not an organization or a corporation; just a veteran Crohn’s Disease patient who understands that it takes one, to know and comfort, another one.

If/when you visit the website, please click on the “IBD Patient Movement” to learn a bit more of the details.  Among those details is the promise that ANY Patient or Warrior Contact Information obtained through the website or the Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol “Patient Movement” will be used SOLELY for the purposes set forth above.  You can then submit your Contact Information and type out a message indicating your status (i.e., Patient, Warrior, location of hospital, etc.) and we will try to expeditiously match zip codes within a hopefully fast-growing database of interested Crohn’s Disease and IBD patients. 

Finally, and as stated above, this is a Charitable Endeavor, but it takes some money to set up the proper non-profit, tax-exempt business entity, pay the web designer and maintain the site/service.  I wish I could fund this myself but because of Crohn’s Disease, all I have to contribute is my sweat equity, but that is my pleasure.  Therefore, if you are so inclined to help us out financially, please understand that any financial contributions will be considered “gifts” until we are able to pay/consult with an attorney to form the appropriate non-profit, tax-exempt business entity.  Thereafter, the Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol will operate just like any other charity.  That said, ANY financial contributions would be greatly appreciated and they can be made in the form of checks made payable to “Crohn’s Disease Warrior Patrol” and mailed to me, Michael A. Weiss, at 184 Zeppi Lane, West Orange, New Jersey, 07052.  My email address specifically for this charitable endeavor is crohnsdiseasewarriorpatrol@gmail.com; my Twitter handle is @CrohnsIBDWarrior.

I thank you for your interest and support.

Partnership with Patients Summit & “Humira” position

Thanks to being awarded a “Travel Scholarship” from the Society for Participatory Medicine based on my contributions to the world of Health Care Social Media, I will be attending the “Partnership with Patients Summit” in Kansas City, Missouri from Friday, Sept 21, 2012 through Sunday, September 23, 2012.  I am honored and humbled by receiving such an Award and I look forward to sharing all that I see and hear by reporting about it on my Blog upon my return.  I intend to bring my Flip HD Camera and trusted Tripod so that I can record daily summaries of the day’s events.

On an unrelated note, yesterday I recorded a One (1) minute Video entitled: “The Drug “Humira” – Miracle Drug or Snake Oil?” utilizing the new wonderful technology from “Vsnap.com.”  Several people presently taking Humira, and getting great results with it, seemed to take offense at my characterization of Humira as “Snake Oil” or as an ineffective drug for Crohn’s Disease.  Granted, the title of the video is rather “dramatic,” but the content of the video is simply MY opinion based on MY experiences and on the experiences of MANY Crohn’s Patients who have sought me out to commiserate.

MY issues with Humira are numerous, especially in light of the drug being approved last week by The European Union for treatment of Severe Crohn’s Disease.  For the purposes of simplicity, I am listing some of them below.  That said, I acknowledge that Humira DOES WORK in treating Crohn’s Disease BUT I am concerned that longer term use of the drug (such as in MY case) will reveal many more negative outcomes and dangerous side effects than are reflected in the sample sizes for which Abbott Laboratories, the manufacturer of Humira, received global approval.

As I was one of the early patients taking Anti-TNF Agent drugs who had to quickly “graduate” from Remicade to Humira and then to Cimzia, I am concerned that the almost fatal (and often on-going) side effects I experienced might occur more frequently than first thought, particularly as these drugs are taken by patients for longer periods of time.  Accordingly, please understand that I write and record about this Humira issue because I want to keep Researchers and Pharmaceutical Companies on their toes, as the pressing need of patients doesn’t always align up with the profit-motives of Pharmaceutical Companies.  Moreover, I feel compelled to speak out due to the misleading Humira television commercials Abbott Laboratories targets at a captive patient audience desperate to get their lives back from these formidable autoimmune diseases.  Some would say I am a cynic but others would conclude I am trying to be realistic.  Regardless, please trust that, in the immortal words of Singer/Songwriter Elvis Costello, “My Aim is True.”

  1. How could ONE (1) Drug such as Humira claim to be “THE” effective Treatment drug in SIX (6) Different autoimmune serious diseases such as:  Moderate to Severe Rheumatoid Arthritis; Moderate to Severe Chronic Plaque Psoriasis; Moderate to Severe Crohn’s Disease; Ankylosing Spondylitis; Psoriatic Arthritis; and Moderate to Severe Polyarticular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis ?
  2. The drug is marketed in the United States to patients via television commercials which focus on “regaining back a certain lifestyle” very much like the manner in which “Erectile Dysfunction” drugs are marketed.  The very serious medical disclaimers are read aloud in a quick and monotone fashion, which I imagine is legally sufficient, but I contend is morally INSUFFICIENT because the commercial then focuses the patient’s eye on the VIDEO “wants” of patients (myself included) instead of the patient’s NEEDS.  Given the increasing number of ineffective usages of Humira (I am extrapolating based on the overall increasing number of patients using Humira) and the severity of the side effect cases, shouldn’t these television advertisements be regulated more carefully so that they better represent the risks associated with taking Humira?
  3. Why is Humira advertised DIRECTLY to patients?  As a Crohn’s Disease patient with NO CHOICE, having run out of drugs to take to treat my Crohn’s and keep me out of the hospital, and thus desperate for a cure or even a treatment that gives me back some semblance of a normal lifestyle, an argument can be made that Abbott Laboratories, the manufacturers of Humira, are manipulating a captive audience.   When you go and ask your doctor to put you on Humira based on seeing these television commercials, it is likely you won’t “hear” the medical disclaimers being carefully told to you by your doctor because all you can “see” is your old “active self” doing the things you love, when you want to do them.  I have a problem with this type of manipulation when the outcome “COULD” be the exact opposite or even worse.
  4. Since Humira DOES WORK in MANY CROHN’S DISEASE CASES, it pains me to write about these issues and in doing so possibly dashing the hopes of these hopeful patients, but someone needs to speak out because I know MANY Crohn’s Disease doctors who are very frustrated and disappointed with both the long-term success of these Anti-TNF Agent drugs and their intense and pervasive side effects.  As for the patients taking Humira now, or considering doing so because they have no choice, they should simply view my comments as a Cautionary Tale; nothing more; nothing less.  But because Crohn’s Disease is not a “sexy” disease, I am so worried that research money will not be adequate to proceed further and therefore patients will have to settle for treatment drugs based on Anti-TNF Agent ideology.  I hope my fellow Crohn’s Disease patients understand my intentions in this regard.

What Happened to Me b/c of Humira

If you’ve read my Blog or followed me on Twitter, you are probably familiar with what happened to me after taking Humira and Cimzia for a significant period of time.  In short, they worked for a while but then I developed severe Respiratory and severe Joint Pain side effects which forced me to stop taking them.  A few months later I began to come down with intermittent fevers of 105 often accompanied by Bronchitis or Pneumonia.  Eventually, I became so sick that I had to be hospitalized for what the doctors then thought was drug-resistant Pneumonia.  After several hospitalizations, I developed the additional symptom of severe Shortness of Breath and that prompted a CT Scan. The CT Scan showed accumulated severe damage to my lungs which the Thoracic Surgeon thought was consistent with Lung Cancer even though I have been a non-smoker my entire life of 49 years.  They performed a surgical biopsy because they wanted to obtain samples of my lung while “I was still able to breathe on my own,” that’s how grave a situation they thought I was in.  Thankfully, I did not have Lung Cancer but instead had an often fatal Lung Condition called Bronchiolitis Obliterans with Organizing Pneumonia or “BOOP.”

My Crohn’s doctors recognized the connection of the BOOP to the Anti-TNF Agent drugs Humira and Cimzia and I began treatment for the BOOP with 60 mgs of Prednisone daily with the intent to eventually taper down over the course of ONE (1) year.  That is the standard, and ONLY successful, treatment for BOOP.  However, after 4 months or so, I still had severe shortness of breath and had gained 55 pounds.  My Crohn’s doctor discontinued the Prednisone and, after consulting with several other doctors, put me on the Chemotherapy drug, Cytoxan.  The Cytoxan worked on the BOOP after a few monthly infusions but then my Crohn’s Disease started to act up after being in remission for several years.  A few months later my Crohn’s became so active I was forced to have my 20th extensive intestional surgery to address it.  I was in the hospital for 17 days and in addition to the Crohn’s surgery, I had to deal with several other SERIOUS complications from the treatment for BOOP, which resulted from the Anti-TNF Agent drugs (e.g. Heart and Testosterone issues).

Since taking the Anti-TNF Agent drugs, I’ve also noticed that run-of-the-mill Seasonal Allergies seem to trigger such an exaggerated immune system response that they CRIPPLE ME.  That might sound strange emanating from typical  watery eyes, sinus pain and the sniffles but I get so lethargic it is as if I’m in the 14th round of a 15th round Boxing Match with boxing legend Mike Tyson and I am doing all I can just to stand on my two (2) feet.  Additionally, this lethargic feeling is often accompanied by Migraine Headaches so severe I can’t move an inch once I find a spot in the bedroom where I achieve total darkness and quiet.  I experienced much less severe versions of these symptoms once I was diagnosed with Crohn’s Disease but after I began taking Remicade, Humira and then Cimzia, these unpredictable “episodes” became appreciably worse and ultimately, Disabling.

Again, mine is a cautionary tale but I’m not that lucky or unlucky to be that 1 in 10,000 or so patients who gets BOOP from Humira.  I have had Crohn’s Disease for almost 30 years and I can honestly say that my illness is MUCH MORE PERVASIVE since taking the Anti-TNF Agent drugs.  It’s as if I made a deal with the devil to get Five (5) good years at the expense of a lifetime of bizarre, painful, disabling and increasingly serious and expensive side effects.  There you have it.  I hope you do GREAT on Humira.  But if you run into problems, please feel free to contact me, after 1st contacting your doctor. Good health to all.

If Crohn’s Disease don’t getcha, the drugs or the side effects will

Recently, I tweeted via @HospitalPatient:

Battling Crohn’s Disease is like trying 2 survive “The Perfect Storm” in a Raft. If the Disease don’t getcha’, the drugs or the side effects will!

The Tweet was re-tweeted by MANY people so I guess I accidentally stumbled into explaining what it feels like to live with, and manage, a chronic illness like Crohn’s Disease.  More importantly, this Tweet can be true of so many chronic and autoimmune illnesses.  But when you LOOK “okay” or “more than okay,” healthy people are “suspect.”  They may not say this at dinner when you have a pleasant evening as friends or as “friends of friends,” but they damn sure say it to their spouse before going to sleep and reviewing the evening’s events as I know I would, if I weren’t intimately familiar with Crohn’s Disease for almost thirty (30) years.  More specifically, they might ask:  How could someone so smart and seemingly healthy-looking have so many medical problems?

I can’t speak for the many folks who battle other autoimmune chronic illnesses but with Crohn’s Disease and other “Inflammatory Bowel Diseases” (i.e. “IBD”), the progression from misdiagnosis to proper diagnosis to trying to manage it goes something like this based on MY personal experiences (and please pardon the “Vertical Bullet Points” but I think the progression of the Disease is more easily understood this way):

  • 20 years of age – You suddenly have severe and debilitating abdominal cramping, extreme and inexplicable lethargy and crippling knee pain coupled with doubts from loved ones who think you’re a hypochondriac despite you always being an energetic and insatiable athlete.  In college, these symptoms were synonymous with proud hangovers after memorable nights but for some reason you were always in the bathroom longer than everyone else.  The cramping was also so intense it brought tears to your eyes as you prayed for it to stop.  You switched to Vodka ‘cause it’s clear and uncomplicated, thinking that’d do the trick. Ergo, the need for Graduate School.
  • A few misdiagnoses by well-intended local doctors accompanied by painful experiments with various antibiotics only make the aforementioned symptoms worse.  Colds turn into Bronchitis more quickly and you become increasingly familiar with bathrooms and Health Insurance Claims forms.
  • The Journey to the Road to Proper Diagnosis might include a bizarre reaction to having all four (4) Wisdom Teeth pulled at one time.  Sure, your mouth blows up for a few days afterwards but when this continues to happen for 6 months after the dental surgery, there’s something wrong.  Seasonal allergies begin to make you so weak that you fall asleep during Sunday Family Dinner.  Your Dad yells at you for having bad manners but his words come out in slow motion because you are so “out of it.”  You try every possible over-the-counter allergy medication but nothing seems to work like it does for your friends or how it’s supposed to on the television commercials.  All you want to do is sleep and crawl into the fetal position to battle the abdominal cramps and repeat trips to the bathroom.
  • Some world renown expert suggests putting you in a hyperbaric chamber to recover from the dental surgery but everyone in your family thinks he’s nuts.  You’re beginning to feel ostracized from those you love because no one seems to understand the physical pain you are in. You learn how to spell “G-A-S-T-R-O-E-N-T-E-R-O-L-O-G-I-S-T.”  But he or she diagnoses you with what is tantamount to a “bad stomach” or “IBS,” Irritable Bowel Syndrome.  Still, your symptoms don’t change.
  • 24 years of age Trying to brush off what those around you refer to as “psychological,” you begin your career at some low-level office job.  One day they celebrate a colleague’s birthday with Flavored Popcorn.  You indulge even though popcorn doesn’t exactly “agree with you.”  30 minutes later the intense abdominal cramps start and this time they are increasing in intensity almost as if you are in child labor.  You go to the office bathroom so no one sees you grimace in pain as you try to manage the cramps which now make you feel like your stomach might literally explode.
  • Everything is foggy and you are in an ambulance on the way to a local hospital.   Someone at your job found you passed out on the bathroom floor.  The hospital admits you and loads you up on drugs to dull the pain.  Your family rushes to your aid feeling terrible that it wasn’t psychological after all.
  • After numerous painful and awkward diagnostic tests, the Gastroenterologist tells you and your Mom that you have a chronic, autoimmune and incurable digestive illness called “Crohn’s Disease.”  He gives you a pamphlet from the “Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation” which explains the symptoms. You read the list aloud and it’s like someone summarized your last year or so and called it “Crohn’s Disease.”  At first, it’s obviously bad news but strangely it becomes incredibly validating because when your family reads it, they no longer see you as the “Complainer.”  They see you as a young adult who now suffers from what could be a devastating disease.  The good news is that Crohn’s is a “broad spectrum” disease so things may not be so bad.
  • 25 years of age1988 – Your Mom gets you an appointment with “the best of the best” doctors who specialize in Crohn’s Disease.  He becomes your doctor for the next 30 years.  At first, he does whatever he could to stave off surgery but your “type” of Crohn’s Disease is “obstructive” and aggressive.  After numerous hospitalizations for intravenous medications, you soon require surgery to alleviate a life-threatening small bowel obstruction.  What about the broad spectrum?  For you, it was a broad spectrum of bullshit.
  • 1989 – In the early years with the disease, you go to business and law school but the first year of law school includes several hospitalizations and three (3) more surgeries.  The Dean calls you personally to respectfully ask you to take the year off to focus on your health.  Besides, you can’t pass the 1st year of law school without formally listening to the class lectures.  You ask for the cassettes.  The Dean is silent.  You do very well in law school and upon graduation you receive the 1st “Dean’s Award” for Unique and Outstanding contributions to the school and the student community.
  • 29 years of age1992 – You start to work and advance in your career but it seems that every step forward is accompanied by 3 steps back due to more hospitalizations and more surgeries. You only lose inches of small bowel during each surgery but with Crohn’s Disease, surgery begets more surgery.  Surgery also causes scar tissue or “adhesions” and eventually they grow to block your small bowel and you require even more surgery to fix this “mechanical” byproduct from a prior surgery.  The hospitalizations and surgeries start to pile up as do the co-payments.  Doing your annual tax return becomes a royal pain in the ass.
  • You form unique close friendships because you learn so much from what your friends try to do for you, when you can’t do for yourself.  By example, you learn how to be a great friend.  It takes a while to sink in, but you realize you’re lucky, but not in a materialistic manner. For you, friendships are the currency of life.  You become wise as the disease is simultaneously making you poor.  Employment decisions are increasingly influenced by the healthcare coverage offered.
  • 36 years of age1999 – You try to keep up athletically but your good intentions of shaping up wind up necessitating spine fusion surgery to repair a ruptured disc which is painfully misdiagnosed for six (6) months.  Again, many around you doubt your pain while lazy doctors toss your “negative” MRI films on the floor with proclamations that you are “making it up” to seek attention and drugs.  You cry at their insensitivity but it doesn’t stop you from getting answers, for such stifling back pain cannot be normal.  Sure enough, two (2) “discograms” confirm a ruptured disc and spine-fusion is the ONLY answer.  Numerous abdominal surgeries have made your back weak and Crohn’s has again caused expensive misery.  However, it’s also validation once again and now you know to NEVER doubt your body because you simply can’t ever underestimate the reach of what will be your life-long nemesis, Crohn’s Disease.
  • 1999 – 2001 - Your health insurance company only covers back surgeries emanating from MRI diagnoses; they view discograms as antiquated despite their sole existence to diagnose what MRI’s can’t.  Your folks float you the money for the back surgery and you appeal the health insurance company’s decision.  You lose; you appeal again.  You finally win and get awarded attorney’s fees.  You write a Book to help others learn from your experiences called, “Confessions of a Professional Hospital Patient.”  It gets you on NBC’s “Today Show.”  You date your physical therapist.  Life is returning to normal.
  • Your trusted Crohn’s Disease doctor starts trying varies medications called “Biologics” to slow the progress of your disease and each comes with side effects that would scare Dr. Kevorkian.  The cramping, myriad of bathroom issues and extreme lethargy goes away but soon anaphylactic drug reactions occur, stifling joint pain comes on like the randomness of a Voodoo Doll being pricked by the driver you accidentally cut off on the 405 out in Los Angeles.  Yes, your Crohn’s Disease is in check, but you begin to come down with increasingly serious cases of Bronchitis and Pneumonia.  You are hospitalized so many times, for so many things, you must chronicle it all in a Word document because no one would ever believe you without specific dates and details.
  • You work for yourself because no employer would understand and accept the randomness and pervasive effects of this chronic “digestive” disease.  The autoimmune aspects become more and more expansive and unpredictable as you age.  Due to the help of friends and family, you have some success and get back into the fast lane of merely trying to reach your professional potential.  You make Movies and practice Entertainment Law and fly back and forth between New Jersey and Los Angeles.  Life is good.   You remember what a former girlfriend told you and try to live by it: “Michael, your Crohn’s Disease will never come between us; but how you handle it will.”
  • 2005 – You move to Los Angeles, California, in part to more quickly pursue your professional potential for fear of being stymied at any moment by your disease, but also to prove to yourself that you can be independent of the disease, doctors and hospitals you grew accustomed to in New York and New Jersey.  It works for a while and Santa Monica, CA is heaven.  You meet some new “old friends.”  The hospitalizations still occur but they seem to be caused more by disease complications and side effects from treatment medications than by the disease itself.  For most people, that would be a bummer.  For you, it’s a vacation.
  • 2008 - Life marches on and soon your Dad passes away.  You take solace in the fact that at least he saw you happy when he came out to visit with your Mom and rode around Los Angeles with you in a convertible smiling and retelling stories about the last time he was out in “Cali” just prior to being drafted for the Korean War.  You head back to New Jersey to mourn his death and celebrate his life, but returning to Santa Monica, CA after the “Shiva” process starts a downward disease progression that will change your life, yet again.
  • You aren’t even sure it is safe to get on the flight back to Los Angeles because the pain in your gut is so severe but you figure it’s just the mourning for the passing of your Dad.   You make it back to Santa Monica, CA and unbeknownst to you; your small bowel is slowly being strangulated by some surgical material from a prior abdominal incisional hernia surgery. You call your West Coast Crohn’s doctor and make an appointment for the next day but you half-kidding tell him you may not make it through the night.  It’s probably a overly dramatic statement but after so many years of doing battle, you’d come to know your adversary like veteran top-ranked tennis pros facing off against each other for the 10th time at the US Open in Flushing Meadows, NY.
  • At 3 AM you wake up and feel like Marlon Brando’s “Vito Corleone” in “The Godfather” when he rolled over and died in his vegetable patch.  Your Santa Monica apartment is devoid of said vegetable patch so you settle for stumbling into some stand-up lamps and collapse.  You call an ambulance but while waiting assume you perforated your intestine, the final knock-out punch from your Crohn’s Disease.  You are a goner if the ambulance doesn’t arrive FAST.
  • 45 years of age 2008 – Not so FAST.  The ambulance arrives as if it were E-ZPass on the tollbooths saving James Caan’s “Sonny Corleone” character so he could hit the accelerator and drive on through the machine gun fire to live to fight another day, perhaps in “Godfather Part Two.” But it takes two (2) major surgeries and several hospitalizations to repair your strangulated small bowel. More adhesions arise and you also begin to experience “comprehensive” effects of being on those new “Biologics” Crohn’s Disease drugs called “Anti-TNF Agents” such as Remicade, Humira and Cimzia. You try to work but you either wind up in restaurant bathrooms for ridiculous periods of time (which ironically is often acceptable in LA because some wacky colleagues think you are using the bathroom for entirely different reasons!) or you are so weak some days you can’t get out of bed.  Since your work is also your social life, you have time to carve out a new path and begin sharing your experiences on various Health Care Social Media platforms to try and help others.
  • Just as you get accustomed to your role as a healthcare commentator, you have more to comment about as your small bowel again gets blocked by adhesions. Trying to avoid another surgery and numerous hospitalizations, you go on a “Liquids and Lollipops” diet.  Your ingenuity goes only so far and you wind up driving from Santa Monica, CA to Rochester, MN to be operated on at The Mayo Clinic.  It’s the summer and you think a drive across the country will do you good and also quench your desire to finally witness a harmless, picturesque tornado in the Plains that is visible from the highway but safely far away in vacant farmland.  It’s called making lemonade out of lemons.  The drive is beautiful but the unrelenting pain in your gut keeps you in some nice small Iowa highway-side town for three (3) days at a Best Western as the pain is so bad you can’t drive.  With nothing to do but lie in bed, watch cable television and wait for Raquel Welch or Angie Dickinson to knock on your door, you feel like an old-fashioned bank robber held up in some small safe town waiting for the Sheriff to pass through.  Having Crohn’s Disease will certainly let your mind wander.
  • 2010 – There was no tornado but you’re proud you keep making the best of the situation as the drive is something you’ll never forget; so was your Six-Week stay at The Mayo Clinic.  The adhesion surgery went well but you also had some other unrelated but very specific severe pain in and around your abdominal wall.  Unfortunately, you came across a surgeon who thought you were nuts and he was God.  He was mistaken on both counts.  You didn’t flinch and eventually got treated by a Mayo Clinic Gastroenterologist while recovering from the adhesion surgery.  While the doctors had the best of intentions and this other problem was palpable to the touch and visible as some sort of growth emanating from your abdomen, they wouldn’t listen to you when they diagnosed the pain as a flare-up of your Crohn’s and ordered you to begin an intensive course of intravenous steroids.
  • You respectfully refused because you learned a long time ago what was, and what was NOT, a direct body blow from your Crohn’s.  This was surely mechanical but nobody would listen to an experienced Crohn’s Disease patient who had never been wrong about his body.  You were then kicked out of The Mayo Clinic for refusing to follow their orders and treatment plan.  You cried at their obstinacy but as you had done in the past, you fought back to get answers.
  • You flew home to New Jersey and headed back to your New York Crohn’s Doctor of 30 years, PICC line in tow.  He’d figured out every nuance of your Crohn’s Disease so you were confident he and his colleagues at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York could do everything The Mayo Clinic, for some reason, could, or would, not.
  • Prior to being admitted to Mt. Sinai Hospital, you received a Certified Letter from The Mayo Clinic effectively banning you from that fine medical institution FOR LIFE: “because of your actions which demonstrate a lack of trust with Mayo providers, a failure to follow a recommended treatment plan and abusive behavior toward our hospital staff.”
  • Your mother cried when she read that letter even through you knew you’d soon be vindicated.  That said, The Mayo Clinic Banishment Letter made you feel like a “leper” and even your Crohn’s Disease had never done that.  As for “abusive behavior” toward hospital staff, you were most polite and respectful except when they did not listen to you explain your symptoms.  Then you became simply a frustrated hospital patient who had been hospitalized far away from home, for almost 6 weeks.  What they call “abusive,” you objectively viewed as “frustrated.”  Potato, Patato.
  • Your Mayo Clinic frustrations were corroborated the first day at Mt. Sinai Hospital when an Endoscopic test apparently not available at The Mayo Clinic confirmed that your problem was purely mechanical and was NOT at all a Crohn’s Disease flare-up.  Had you followed The Mayo Clinic’s advice, you’d be substantially damaging your body with POTENT intravenous steroid drugs.
  • After allotting three (3) months for The Mayo Clinic adhesion surgery to heal, exploratory surgery was performed which immediately revealed a “bundle of impinged nerves” as the culprit causing the pain.  The surgeon removed them from your abdomen, and the problem was solved.  When you tried to convey this discovery to The Mayo Clinic in an attempt to help them, help other patients with possibly the same problem, they ignored your correspondence.
  • 48 years of age2011 – It should have been a very good year especially in light of the December, 2010 surgery which had fixed the problem The Mayo Clinic had missed.  But recuperation from that relatively minimally invasive surgery also involved adjusting to moving back to New Jersey to live with your Mom as your medical bills and inability to work had played your hand.  Santa Monica, CA will be sorely missed but when you had to sell your car to pay for the monthly health insurance premiums, there was no looking back.
  • 2011 was also marked by the dramatic increased effects of your compromised immune system and the side effects of having taken the Anti-TNF Agent “Miracle Drugs” for several years.  While these “Biologic” drugs did enable you to have a few good and productive years in New Jersey and then in Santa Monica pursuing your dream of making movies, that life came at a price you could not afford.  At first, it was only the sudden onset of excruciating joint pain but then seemingly out of nowhere you’d wake up with fevers every 2 or 3 weeks that were as high as 105.  Then you were in, and out of, hospitals for bronchitis and pneumonia until your extreme shortness of breath caused a New Jersey emergency room to delve deeper.
  • Walking up stairs or participating in any type of strenuous activity had begun to cause such severe shortness of breath it felt like you were sucking for your next breath through a pencil-thin straw.  After too many Emergency Room Trips to remember, the New Jersey ER doctors performed more invasive lung tests and suddenly you woke up in a hospital room with 8-10 doctors looking down on you.  They had found numerous unidentifiable spots on your lungs and were prepping you for lung biopsy surgery.  It was happening so fast it seemed surreal.  You asked the thoracic surgeon about the look of urgency in everyone’s eyes and he told you that lung cancer was suspected and they needed to obtain the biopsy while you were still able to operate your lungs without mechanical assistance.  That day sucked.
  • You had been through so many surgeries but somehow an operation on your lungs seemed to make you feel even more vulnerable.  You hated waking up in the Recovery Room in pain and feeling COLD so you begged the surgeon and his team to make sure your pain and warmth were reasonable attended to.  Having been briefed on all you had been through in just the past few years, everyone seemed to be on the same surgical page, but they never are, and rarely ever will be.  You woke up from the surgery shivering and in severe pain.  It was as if your worst nightmare had come true.  The lovely nursing staff tried to help and gave you the standard pain medications but your tolerance for them had been blown up long ago.  You needed the Pain Management Team but signals got crossed and you suffered like an abandoned wounded soldier for 3 days.
  • Once you were coherent, they told you that you thankfully did NOT have lung cancer but you had a rare, but sometimes fatal, lung condition called “Bronchiolitis Obliterans with Organizing Pneumonia” or “BOOP.”  Technically, it is treatable with a year-long tapered course of the steroid drug, Prednisone, beginning at 60 MGs a day. But they hadn’t much experience treating BOOP and that was evident as you watched the 8-10 doctors debate the proper dosage of Prednisone to start you off at.  They also didn’t understand how you could even acquire BOOP since it typically affected older patients and was apparently much more prevalent among coal miners!  It had to be the Crohn’s Disease Anti-TNF Agent drugs because once you started them you also began experiencing severe respiratory symptoms.  While you loved New Jersey and it’d be hard to find a more appreciative fan of Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, your BOOP treatment had to be managed by your New York Crohn’s doctor and a New York Pulmonologist who hopefully had seen this BOOP sh*tstorm several times before.
  • The New York doctors clearly viewed the Crohn’s drugs as the cause of the BOOP and watched you carefully as the Prednisone started to change your body.  It soon became evident that you had all the side effects of Prednisone (i.e., you gained 50 pounds in 3 ½ months) but without its medical benefits as you were still struggling to breathe like Redd Foxx running The Boston Marathon at 70 years of age.  Your continuing breathing issues also caused more pneumonia episodes and more hospitalizations and if you had gained another pound from the Prednisone your body might have exploded.  Accordingly, the NY doctors convened and abandoned the traditional Prednisone BOOP treatment for an experimental one involving the Chemotherapy Drug, Cytoxan.  After a few monthly infusions of Cytoxan, the BOOP began to clear.  Again, you were “lucky.”
  • The Cytoxan was working miracles on the BOOP but it was also causing your Crohn’s Disease to flare-up.  You were fighting battles on so many fronts not to mention the barrage of medical bills, dunning notices, collection calls and disability paperwork.  Your dreams of making movies and finding a smart, cool, beautiful woman had to be placed on hold as you tried to devise a mindset to survive the avalanche of one medical adversity after another.  But when you think about it, it was all caused by your Crohn’s Disease, in one way or another.  “If the Thunder don’t get ya’, then the Lightning will.”
  • The late 2011/early 2012 Crohn’s flare-ups resulted in a few hospitalizations but nothing appeared prominently in the diagnostic tests.  However, you couldn’t leave your house due to the “broad spectrum” of Crohn’s Disease symptoms and the severe pain you experienced on a daily basis.  That “broad spectrum” phrase gives -  and it takes.  Finally, in the spring of 2012 and only at the age of 49, your long-trusted Crohn’s doctor ordered a basic GI Series and it revealed that you had BIG problems in your small bowel.  What was clearly evident to the human eye from this test were a few Strictures (i.e., adhesions causing partial obstructions in the small bowel) and  a red-hot Crohn’s Disease flare-up.  As it turned out, the fancy “cutting-edge” MRI/CT Enterography tests took too broad of a perspective to identify the specifics.  Truth be told, it was a New Jersey radiologist who suggested that you undergo a Small Bowel GI Series for closer examination.  You were initially told such tests take too much patient time and are thus no longer cost-effective for most Radiology Facilities but you again “got lucky” when this New Jersey Radiologist agreed to perform the GI Series.   Nice guy, he was probably a Bruce Springsteen fan.
  • Through your persistence and with the help of some very compassionate and smart doctors, you finally got some answers but they required the most serious Crohn’s Disease surgery you’d have to-date.  You were also told it would be hard to find a surgeon willing to tackle such a complicated gut.  Strangely, it didn’t take long to find that surgeon as you got “lucky” again.  Then, on June 28, 2012, after 17 days at Mt. Sinai Hospital, you were released after undergoing successful surgery during which numerous adhesions were lanced to simply access your intestines, several Strictures were repaired via a few Strictureplasties and your small bowel was Resected at the area of the inflamed Crohn’s Disease flareup.
  • September, 2012 – As you recuperate and try to get re-acclimated to your new plumbing, you go for a routine eye examination and learn you must have your second Cataract Surgery, this time on your right eye.  This is such a classic Crohn’s Disease complication that it’s even published in the “What to possibly expect with Crohn’s Disease” pamphlet.  That should be no problem, you’ll eventually get to it.  There’s several more complications from the Surgery, the BOOP, the Prednisone and the Cytoxan but the big question of the moment is whether or not to take a different chemotherapy drug (i.e., “6MP”) as “preventative medication” to keep you and your Crohn’s Disease away from the operating table?   Since it’s the only Crohn’s Disease drug you have not taken, it’s the only one you can take now.  But you have to wonder: Did the Prednisone or Cytoxan you took to successfully treat the BOOP cause the Strictures and Crohn’s Disease flare-up which required the extensive June, 2012 surgery?  (Keep in mind that the BOOP occurred as a side effect from years of taking the Crohn’s Disease Anti-TNF Agent drugs, Humira and Cimzia.)
  • If you think the answer is “Yes,” then why take the 6MP?  After all, there seems to always be a steep price to pay no matter what you do or take regarding Severe Crohn’s Disease.   And if your time with Crohn’s Disease has proved anything: If the Disease don’t getcha’, the drugs or the side effects will!