Welcome to my blog! This is a place of information and hope for fellow Canadians who are suffering from Lyme disease. I want to share with you the knowledge I have gained during my fight with this debilitating, frightening, and misunderstood illness. I hope you will be blessed.

Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Sunday, February 01, 2015

Our Canadian medical system fails again

Here is an article about my great niece that appeared in The Hamilton Spectator last week.  It really seems that doctors outside of the "infectious disease" scope are more open to changing ideas about Lyme disease.  The infectious disease doctor interviewed for this article, however, spewed the same old rhetoric.  I would like to ask him, "If she were your daughter, what would YOU do?  If the local medical system could find nothing wrong, would you not explore other avenues and other treatment options?  Would you just sit back and watch her suffer?  Would you stop at 28 days of antibiotics if it was clear that it didn't resolve the symptoms?  Wouldn't you try anything?"

And the frustrating part is that Lyme sufferers aren't just going into these longer-term treatments blindly.  There are hundreds upon hundreds, if not thousands, of people who have been greatly helped by long-term antibiotics and more integrative care.  Does all of that clinical evidence count for nothing?

The article is below, but here is the link to the original article.  After reading it, I encourage you to check out the comments by readers below the original article.  Feel free to post your opinion!

FUNDRAISER
Jan 23, 2015                                   

From cartwheels to a wheelchair in one year

      
 
A Westdale teen went from turning cartwheels to a wheelchair in a year.
Grace McWaters was a gymnast, played the violin and got good marks at school. Now, the 14-year-old forgets the names of her pets, doesn't recognize old friends and gets confused about where she lives.
Doctors are baffled. Her parents Brenda and Darryl McWaters are convinced she has Lyme disease.                        
"It is the scariest, most awful thing I've ever experienced in my life," says her mother. "It's like watching her disappear before my eyes."
Neurology experts tried in January to determine why she now has bouts of speaking unintelligibly. Faced with no firm diagnosis or treatment plan in Hamilton, her parents took her Thursday to a Florida clinic run by a medical doctor who uses both Western and naturopathic medicine to treat a wide variety of illnesses from Lyme disease to Alzheimer's to brain trauma to weight loss.
An online campaign and a fundraiser Friday in Westdale have raised more than $20,000 to help the family with the $5,000-a-week cost of going to the Sponaugle Wellness Institute for up to three months of treatment.
"Her health has deteriorated so fast," says her mother. "It's a devastating illness … The more I talk about this, the emotions strangle me."
Grace started Grade 8 at Dalewood Middle School in September 2013 as a healthy, active teen.
"She was lively, energetic and social kid," says her mom. "When we'd go for a walk, she'd see how many cartwheels she could do down the sidewalk. She spent two hours a day on the trampoline. She was very physically active."
The first sign of trouble was heart palpitations followed by headaches, neck pains and sore joints.
"She would be in agony," said her mom. "Her knee would swell up like a balloon."
By October, she had stomach aches and her energy plummeted. She developed sensitivity to light and noise.
"She was losing weight," said her mom. "It was a struggle to get her to drink enough water. She found it impossible to swallow anything."
Grace switched family doctors when no answers could be found. They did every test from iron deficiency to X-rays. Everything was negative.
"I was getting frantic," said her mom. "I felt sick about it … We were at the end of our rope. We had tested for everything … The symptoms kept piling up."
Her mom asked for a Lyme test after noticing Grace had a lot of the symptoms of the tick-borne disease. The result was negative.
However the tests, the ELISA followed by the Western Blot, are considered unreliable by patients and some Lyme doctors. But infectious disease experts say they're "incredibly sensitive" tests and the only ones approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
"The problem with the test is false positives not false negatives," says Dr. Michael Gardam director of infection prevention and control at Toronto's University Health Network.
The parents paid about $500 for Grace to be tested again for Lyme in the U.S. This time the test was positive.
Grace started taking antibiotics, the standard treatment for Lyme disease, under the care of a Canadian and an American doctor along with a naturopath. At first it seemed to work.
"It was like someone put the brakes on," said her mother.
Grace improved enough to start Grade 9 at Westdale Secondary School in the fall — the first time she'd attended school in nearly a year.
But long-term antibiotic use causes health issues of its own. The mainstream medical community maintains Lyme should be cured after no more than 30 days.
"We cure Lyme disease all the time," said Gardam. "People who test positive respond to treatment. It works really well. It's people who test negative who aren't responding to treatment. But than you have to ask yourself, 'Do they have Lyme disease?'"
In November, Grace started deteriorating rapidly to the point she now requires a wheelchair and is having neurological issues such as memory lapses.
"They had no explanation," said her mom. "It's like living in the 'Twilight Zone.'"
The family researched their options and settled on the clinic, which is licensed as a massage establishment with no public complaints against it. It's best known for its detox programs.
"I completely empathize," said Gardam. "I understand why they are looking for any options they can find … I really wonder about the health-care practitioners that offer these things that are so far out of the mainstream. It just makes me very uncomfortable."
But the family thinks Canadian doctors "have their heads in the sand" about Lyme.
"As soon as I mention Lyme, they shut down," said the mom. "They dismiss you and they don't take you seriously. They don't want to help you. You have to go to the U.S. It will change eventually, but not without a fight."
                       
jfrketich@thespec.com
905-526-3349 | @Jfrketich




 

Saturday, December 06, 2014

Lyme News

Thank you to a reader of mine who brought this article to my attention.  Please have a read.  It is a much better depiction of the Lyme situation in Canada.

I am so pleased to learn that "a private member’s motion was passed with all-party consent in the legislature Nov. 27 calling for Ontario to develop an integrated strategy on Lyme disease, to be tabled within one year." (Article:  Lyme Warning No Surprise to Sufferers, www.yorkregion.com)

A similar proposal at the federal level, Bill C-442 introduced by Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, has a bit of a fight on its hands.  Although it has passed all three readings in the House of Commons, there is some opposition by a group of infectious disease doctors.  See this link for all of the information.

OK, so this is going to be an uphill battle, but how great that the Lyme issue is finally getting the attention of people who can actually help to provide real solutions.  I'm sure that in my lifetime, there will be major developments and people will no longer be left to suffer with this devastating illness.

Keep praying!

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Misinformation!

Below is an article from thestar.com from November 26, 2014.  Wow, it's great that they are continuing to spread the word about Lyme disease.....and in the winter!  However, there are a few missing details in the article.  Frankly, the article reads like an overly simplified statement that the public health unit might make.  Sadly, the public health unit doesn't have a full understanding of the gravity of this illness.  Within the article, I have taken my "teacher red pen" and added or corrected information.  Please read so that you are not misinformed as well.
 

Ticks carrying Lyme disease bacteria found in Rouge Valley

Health officials warn the public of ticks and Lyme disease becoming "established" in the area.



Health officials in Toronto, as well as York and Durham regions are warning the public after blacklegged ticks in the Rouge Valley tested positive for the bacteria that causes Lyme disease, according to Toronto Public Health.

A statement released Wednesday said public health units searched for blacklegged ticks, which are the only type of ticks in Ontario that can carry the disease, after receiving reports from members of the public.  My LLMD (Lyme-literate medical doctor) told me that he believes that mosquitoes and black flies can carry the disease, too!  Officials then sent samples for testing and identification. Some tested positive.
 
Although the ticks are more likely to infect people during the warmer summer months, Toronto Public Health warn the bugs and the disease “are becoming established in the Rouge Valley,” which has been a low-risk area for Lyme disease.  As far as I'm concerned, Lyme has been here for a while.  What else would explain the hundreds of Lyme patients left with no care after a Toronto infectious disease doctor closed his door to Lyme sufferers in 2011 (due to threats from the medical board)?  This caused a mass exodus of patients to the U.S. in search of an LLMD there.
 
Health officials are advising the public to reduce the risk of getting bitten and infected by taking precautions, including: wearing long-sleeves, long pants, socks and closed shoes; tucking pant legs into socks, and wearing light-coloured clothing to make ticks more visible; using bug spray with DEET on clothes and exposed skin, as well as checking skin and clothing thoroughly after activities in wooded areas.  DEET is not effective in repelling ticks!  I would not rely on it.  However, there is a spray called permethrin that is used on clothing (not skin) which does repel ticks.  Also, you should do a tick check on your body when you come in from the outdoors, as well as shower right away.
 
Toronto Public Health says early removal of ticks will prevent possible infection, as the transmission requires the tick to be attached for at least 24 hours.  There is much controversy about this. Many Lyme specialists say the time is much shorter than this.
 
Early symptoms of lyme disease can be treated with antibiotics.  Very true!  But if you are bitten and do NOT have symptoms, GET TREATMENT ANYWAY!  My LLMD would provide 3 weeks of antibiotics with a bite in the absence of symptoms.  If early symptoms have developed, then he would give 6 weeks of antibiotics.  If you are sick for a long time before diagnosis, then LLMDs would prescribe antibiotics on an ongoing basis until symptoms have resolved. 
 
Symptoms include fever, headache, muscle and joint pains, fatigue, and red bull’s eye rash.  Yes, these are often the symptoms of early, acute Lyme disease.  But not all of us produce these symptoms.  Only 50% of people bitten develop a rash, and it isn't always a bulls-eye rash.  In my case, I had NO early symptoms!  I developed all sorts of strange symptoms, including neurological symptoms, many months later.  (It might even have been a year or two later.)

In this article, there is no mention of the fact that the baby ticks, called nymphs, are the size of a poppy seed!  You might never know it burrowed into you.  And apparently, the tiny ones are highly infectious.

The article also doesn't mention that you may have to FIGHT with your GP or the ER doctor to give you antibiotics!  Some doctors will want you to send your tick to the lab for testing before antibiotics are prescribed.  My advice......DO NOT WAIT!  It could take a week or two to get the lab results back, and by then the bacteria may have spread to other organs.  Insist on treatment right away!  It is not worth the risk!

Finally, be sure to remove an imbedded tick properly, otherwise the tick is more likely to inject you with the bacteria.  See my tab above called "Protect Yourself from Ticks" for the safest methods of tick removal.

The Toronto Star gets a "C" for this article.  They need to do their homework better.  The public needs more information than this.
 

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Lyme in Australia

Lyme is everywhere.  From Canada, to Poland, to Australia.  It's just so unbelievable to read stories of people, or whole families, affected by Lyme but who are being turned away by the medical community.  And that's happening from one corner of the Earth to the other.

Honestly, does the medical community think we're making this stuff up?  Do they think I've "faked" my recovery after 17 months of antibiotics?  Just what will it take for them to BELIEVE?

I feel for Australians who have been affected by Lyme.  Our situation in Canada is only marginally better then theirs.  But at least we neighbour the U.S. where doctors who treat Lyme are accessible.  Australia is on its own, so the situation is more difficult. 

I was encouraged to see that the Australian family in the video below has found a Lyme-literate medical doctor in Australia to treat them.  They are receiving antibiotics and herbal medications.  I wonder what the rules are in Australia regarding long-term antibiotic treatments for Lyme.  In Canada, a doctor will lose his licence if he/she does not follow the protocol for Lyme treatment which permits only about a month's worth of antibiotics. 

All I can say is that we need to continue to speak up and tell our stories - in newspapers, on the radio, on blogs, on YouTube, on the internet, and on Facebook.  Wherever and whenever we can.  We need to continue to bombard them.  Eventually, things will change; I believe that.  And these social media will have played a huge role in that.