A 53 year old photograph of a
U.S. Marine on a rocky mountain island in
Early in 1970, I was a TV
newscaster for the American Forces Vietnam Network at one of AFVN’s remote
outposts on
Herbicides were not controversial
then; they were a weapon that killed trees and underbrush to deny the enemy
hiding places. It may have prevented an ambush on Americans driving up this
winding road to AFVN and other units.The Photo
Fifty years after I arrived in
Saigon, my doctor at the
A battery of tests, and a visit
with a movement disorders specialist, confirmed the diagnosis: Parkinson’s
disease. I had become a postwar casualty. Immediately, my life changed, but not
always in negative ways. I have become closer to the veterans community,
including a fellow Marine broadcaster whom I worked with on
I continue to educate myself about this complex brain syndrome and my evolving symptoms. I join online seminars and stay active to slow the disease’s progression. I walk, bike, golf, meditate and have learned tai chi. Thanks to the VA’s Recreation Therapy staff, pickle ball has become my favorite work out. A three-wheeled recumbent bike provides better balance and I enjoy hitting the trails with a proud biker group, appropriately named “Vets Riding to Live.” I competed in the VA’s Golden Age Games for the first time and won a medal.
Participating in a one year research project through the VA and University of Iowa Hospitals to study the importance of aerobic exercise for Parkinson’s patients was especially satisfying. We had to walk a minimum 50 minutes, three times a week, at a swift pace. The research is ongoing, but I’m convinced that my exercise regimen is keeping me a step ahead of this menacing rival.
Many years before my diagnosis, as
the Bangkok Bureau Chief for CBS News in
What I discovered there still unsettles me today: helpless parents and their children with heartbreaking deformities; a hospital wing for women with problem pregnancies; jars of aborted Siamese twins and triplets; and villagers who told me they could hear trees falling at night in areas that had been sprayed. Vietnamese officials linked much of this to Agent Orange, but supporting medical evidence didn’t exist—only a frightened population that lived on the poisoned land.
According to the Veterans
Benefits Administration, every veteran who stepped foot in
I’ve been told the central Iowa VA’s
neurology department sees new
The Agent Orange caseload is growing at an alarming rate, with veterans sick from Parkinson’s, cancers, nerve and other serious diseases presumed to be linked to herbicide exposure. Parkinson’s-like conditions became eligible for VA disability compensation last year, and coverage was further expanded by the PACT Act.
Many
Rick Fredericksen is a writer and journalist who lives in Norwalk,
Very good, eye opening article.
ReplyDeleteThank you Debbie. Too many more Parkinson's cases still to be diagnosed among vets and non-vets.
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