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On Sep 22, 11:43 am, "Billzz" wrote:
"La N" wrote in message news:7ibJi.89565$bO6.40689@edtnps89... "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message (I've got a VA evaluation pending right now for Agent Orange determination of squamous cell carcinoma, primary tumor undetermined, manifested in lymph nodes of the neck. Ten and a half hours of surgery and 39 sessions of radiation in 2003--coming up on my five year anniversary in January. And, I wasn't stationed in-country, merely passed through Danang and Bien Hoa and Tan Son Nhut many times.) Congrats on your five years, Ed! As for me, I'm 7 years in remission of a rare bone marrow cancer that is thought to be caused by, in part, exposure to benzene. Always good to read stories of other "survivors". - nilita Good going. I'm out of prostate and bladder cancer. When I was diagnosed I went into the Agent Orange Study. The VA gave me a physical and they send updates quarterly. The presumptive correlation was made so they could get vets into VA to do the study. But according to one of the latest updates, it appears that there is no provable correlation. Heres what they said.... "At the end of the 20 years of follow-up, Ranch Hand pilots and ground crews as a group exhibited no statistically significant increase in the risk of cancer. Differences by military occupation were inconsistent. The Ranch Hand enlisted ground crews, the subgroup with the highest dioxin levels and presumably the greatest herbicide exposure, had a 14 percent decreased risk of cancer. These results do not suggest that herbicides or dioxin exposure are related to cancer in these veterans." SNIP: The above is all very well but one of my old flying comrades has just died from advanced cancer. Charlie Hubbs was a Ranch Hand pilot. He was one of the baseline study groups and then - started falling apart. FWIW four of us from DaNang, all of the same period, all came down with prostate cancer within three months of each other. Must have been something about the water . . .After 7800 rads six years ago I'm still around but life is not the same . . . Walt BJ |
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"WaltBJ" wrote in message
ps.com... On Sep 22, 11:43 am, "Billzz" wrote: "La N" wrote in message news:7ibJi.89565$bO6.40689@edtnps89... "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message (I've got a VA evaluation pending right now for Agent Orange determination of squamous cell carcinoma, primary tumor undetermined, manifested in lymph nodes of the neck. Ten and a half hours of surgery and 39 sessions of radiation in 2003--coming up on my five year anniversary in January. And, I wasn't stationed in-country, merely passed through Danang and Bien Hoa and Tan Son Nhut many times.) Congrats on your five years, Ed! As for me, I'm 7 years in remission of a rare bone marrow cancer that is thought to be caused by, in part, exposure to benzene. Always good to read stories of other "survivors". - nilita Good going. I'm out of prostate and bladder cancer. When I was diagnosed I went into the Agent Orange Study. The VA gave me a physical and they send updates quarterly. The presumptive correlation was made so they could get vets into VA to do the study. But according to one of the latest updates, it appears that there is no provable correlation. Heres what they said.... "At the end of the 20 years of follow-up, Ranch Hand pilots and ground crews as a group exhibited no statistically significant increase in the risk of cancer. Differences by military occupation were inconsistent. The Ranch Hand enlisted ground crews, the subgroup with the highest dioxin levels and presumably the greatest herbicide exposure, had a 14 percent decreased risk of cancer. These results do not suggest that herbicides or dioxin exposure are related to cancer in these veterans." SNIP: The above is all very well but one of my old flying comrades has just died from advanced cancer. Charlie Hubbs was a Ranch Hand pilot. He was one of the baseline study groups and then - started falling apart. FWIW four of us from DaNang, all of the same period, all came down with prostate cancer within three months of each other. Must have been something about the water . . .After 7800 rads six years ago I'm still around but life is not the same . . . Walt BJ I know what you mean since I elected the Radical Prostatectomy. And I said that the finding does not help anyone who has prostate cancer, only that they can check Agent Orange off the list. I'm told that the VA will not take anyone out of VA, because of this. I have two friends who were ground-pounders, at the same time, and came down with prostate cancer, about the same time. But then my brother, who was never in Vietnam (only US Army in Hawaii) also came down with it, and a year earlier than myself. So the key is to get a PSA test annually. It's more related to age than anything else. I could go on, with other research, but the bottom line is get a PSA test. Incidentally, life can be the same but you have to go back to a urologist - and there are several ways. But the subject is not fit for USENet discussion. |
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Billzz wrote:
"WaltBJ" wrote in message ps.com... On Sep 22, 11:43 am, "Billzz" wrote: "La N" wrote in message news:7ibJi.89565$bO6.40689@edtnps89... "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message (I've got a VA evaluation pending right now for Agent Orange determination of squamous cell carcinoma, primary tumor undetermined, manifested in lymph nodes of the neck. Ten and a half hours of surgery and 39 sessions of radiation in 2003--coming up on my five year anniversary in January. And, I wasn't stationed in-country, merely passed through Danang and Bien Hoa and Tan Son Nhut many times.) Congrats on your five years, Ed! As for me, I'm 7 years in remission of a rare bone marrow cancer that is thought to be caused by, in part, exposure to benzene. Always good to read stories of other "survivors". - nilita Good going. I'm out of prostate and bladder cancer. When I was diagnosed I went into the Agent Orange Study. The VA gave me a physical and they send updates quarterly. The presumptive correlation was made so they could get vets into VA to do the study. But according to one of the latest updates, it appears that there is no provable correlation. Heres what they said.... "At the end of the 20 years of follow-up, Ranch Hand pilots and ground crews as a group exhibited no statistically significant increase in the risk of cancer. Differences by military occupation were inconsistent. The Ranch Hand enlisted ground crews, the subgroup with the highest dioxin levels and presumably the greatest herbicide exposure, had a 14 percent decreased risk of cancer. These results do not suggest that herbicides or dioxin exposure are related to cancer in these veterans." SNIP: The above is all very well but one of my old flying comrades has just died from advanced cancer. Charlie Hubbs was a Ranch Hand pilot. He was one of the baseline study groups and then - started falling apart. FWIW four of us from DaNang, all of the same period, all came down with prostate cancer within three months of each other. Must have been something about the water . . .After 7800 rads six years ago I'm still around but life is not the same . . . Walt BJ I know what you mean since I elected the Radical Prostatectomy. And I said that the finding does not help anyone who has prostate cancer, only that they can check Agent Orange off the list. I'm told that the VA will not take anyone out of VA, because of this. I have two friends who were ground-pounders, at the same time, and came down with prostate cancer, about the same time. But then my brother, who was never in Vietnam (only US Army in Hawaii) also came down with it, and a year earlier than myself. So the key is to get a PSA test annually. It's more related to age than anything else. I could go on, with other research, but the bottom line is get a PSA test. Incidentally, life can be the same but you have to go back to a urologist - and there are several ways. But the subject is not fit for USENet discussion. family history/genetics has a bit to play in this, similar to breast cancer. redc1c4, who takes the finger to get the PSA test: they realize you're serious. %-) -- "Enlisted men are stupid, but extremely cunning and sly, and bear considerable watching." Army Officer's Guide |
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On Mon, 24 Sep 2007 22:06:37 -0700, WaltBJ
wrote: SNIP: The above is all very well but one of my old flying comrades has just died from advanced cancer. Charlie Hubbs was a Ranch Hand pilot. He was one of the baseline study groups and then - started falling apart. FWIW four of us from DaNang, all of the same period, all came down with prostate cancer within three months of each other. Must have been something about the water . . .After 7800 rads six years ago I'm still around but life is not the same . . . Walt BJ Saw a great line regarding radiation therapy a while back--"it's the gift that keeps on giving." Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
On Mon, 24 Sep 2007 22:06:37 -0700, WaltBJ wrote: SNIP: The above is all very well but one of my old flying comrades has just died from advanced cancer. Charlie Hubbs was a Ranch Hand pilot. He was one of the baseline study groups and then - started falling apart. FWIW four of us from DaNang, all of the same period, all came down with prostate cancer within three months of each other. Must have been something about the water . . .After 7800 rads six years ago I'm still around but life is not the same . . . Walt BJ Saw a great line regarding radiation therapy a while back--"it's the gift that keeps on giving." Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com I am trying to figure out if the VA is doing right by veterans in this area. My wife is a VA physician and I teach agent orange in my class. I just finished a stint at the National Cancer institute on cancer screening research Any comments welcome Vince |
#16
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![]() "Vince" wrote in message . .. Ed Rasimus wrote: On Mon, 24 Sep 2007 22:06:37 -0700, WaltBJ wrote: SNIP: The above is all very well but one of my old flying comrades has just died from advanced cancer. Charlie Hubbs was a Ranch Hand pilot. He was one of the baseline study groups and then - started falling apart. FWIW four of us from DaNang, all of the same period, all came down with prostate cancer within three months of each other. Must have been something about the water . . .After 7800 rads six years ago I'm still around but life is not the same . . . Walt BJ Saw a great line regarding radiation therapy a while back--"it's the gift that keeps on giving." Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com I am trying to figure out if the VA is doing right by veterans in this area. My wife is a VA physician and I teach agent orange in my class. I just finished a stint at the National Cancer institute on cancer screening research Any comments welcome Vince Well, somewhat interestingly I had a bit of a battle with a rare bone marrow cancer - myelodysplastic syndrome (the disease that killed author/astronomer Carl Sagan), and benzene (component of AO) has been implicated in this disease. Of course, I've never been to Vietnam, but I used to use the aerosol Raid way too much (I had somewhat of a bug/fly phobia). - nilita |
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On Tue, 25 Sep 2007 09:38:51 -0400, Vince wrote:
Ed Rasimus wrote: Saw a great line regarding radiation therapy a while back--"it's the gift that keeps on giving." I am trying to figure out if the VA is doing right by veterans in this area. My wife is a VA physician and I teach agent orange in my class. I just finished a stint at the National Cancer institute on cancer screening research Any comments welcome Vince Since you asked for comments and you have a VA connection: I've never received a bit of care from a VA facility. As retired military I've got TriCare and have found it an excellent health plan, although not what I was promised when I started my career. I was advised by a friend that I should get registered in the VA health care system. I completed the paperwork, but was rejected for registration. Get that...not rejected for services, but rejected for simple listing as a qualified veteran! The reason being that I refuse to complete the full financial disclosure that they demand. My finances are, frankly, none of their business. The priority listing for service in the VA manual says that a retiree with 10% or more service-connected disability is entitled to priority three. Financial qualification is required for veterans, not full career retirees, with no disability to qualify at priority eight. Frankly, from what I've seen of VA facilities, clientele and staff (no offense intended to your wife), I'm not sure I would risk VA services. My surgery was handled at USAF Academy hospital and follow-up radiation at Memorial Hospital Cancer Center in Colorado Springs. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
On Tue, 25 Sep 2007 09:38:51 -0400, Vince wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote: Saw a great line regarding radiation therapy a while back--"it's the gift that keeps on giving." I am trying to figure out if the VA is doing right by veterans in this area. My wife is a VA physician and I teach agent orange in my class. I just finished a stint at the National Cancer institute on cancer screening research Any comments welcome Vince Since you asked for comments and you have a VA connection: I've never received a bit of care from a VA facility. As retired military I've got TriCare and have found it an excellent health plan, although not what I was promised when I started my career. I was advised by a friend that I should get registered in the VA health care system. I completed the paperwork, but was rejected for registration. Get that...not rejected for services, but rejected for simple listing as a qualified veteran! The reason being that I refuse to complete the full financial disclosure that they demand. My finances are, frankly, none of their business. The priority listing for service in the VA manual says that a retiree with 10% or more service-connected disability is entitled to priority three. Financial qualification is required for veterans, not full career retirees, with no disability to qualify at priority eight. Frankly, from what I've seen of VA facilities, clientele and staff (no offense intended to your wife), I'm not sure I would risk VA services. My surgery was handled at USAF Academy hospital and follow-up radiation at Memorial Hospital Cancer Center in Colorado Springs. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com Thank you for your reply I wish you the best interestingly, the portion of the VA I am personally interested in has been adopted from the VA by the DOD DOD to adopt VA medical imaging system BY Bob Brewin Published on June 15, 2006 WASHINGTON, D.C. –- The Defense Department’s Military Health System (MHS) has decided to adopt the Department of Veterans Affairs’ medical imaging system for use in its electronic health care program, said Carl Hendricks, MHS’ chief information officer, speaking at FCW Events’ Government Health IT conference. Hendricks said the decision represents an increasing convergence of e-health systems operated by the two departments, which run the largest health care systems in the country. It made sense for MHS to adopt a “great VA imaging system,” he said. Hendricks said MHS wants to use as much code as possible from the VA’s imaging system, which meets DOD standards. DOD will also work with the VA to improve the system, he added. Although most medical imaging systems focus on picture archiving and communications systems designed to digitize, store and manage X-ray images, Dr. Rob Kolodner, chief health informatics officer at the Veterans Health Administration, said the VA’s system does much more. In addition to X-rays, the Veterans Health Information Systems and Technology Architecture (VistA) Imaging system stores and manages images such as retinal scans and exports them to a computerized patient record system, Kolodner said. VistA Imaging can also scan and store paper medical records, which Hendricks said will help DOD import records from non-MHS clinicians who treat military patients and their families outside DOD hospitals and clinics. The VA/DOD Clinical Data Repository/Health Data Repository (CHDR) enables data exchanges between the departments’ health systems. VA clinicians can easily tap into CHDR to access data from DOD facilities. During a demonstration of CHDR at the conference, Kolodner showed how a VA doctor could import tests performed on an evacuee from Iraq at the Army’s Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany into the VistA system, reducing the need for and cost of multiple tests. The Department of Health and Human Services is pushing for nationwide, interoperable e-health systems, but CHDR is ahead of efforts in the civilian sector, Hendricks said. “No one else has done this [e-health data exchange] with data that is computable,” he said. http://govhealthit.com/article94918-06-15-06-Web As to overall care you might like to read http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/fea...1.longman.html Again best wishes Vince |
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