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SusanUnPC Needs Help

Posted by Leslie, a regular contributor to this blog.

I’m going to steal what Booman and Daily Kos’s Howie Martin wrote, because we all love SusanUnPC and she needs our help.

From time to time, those of us who are urgently and diligently working to “take our country back” are drawn to one of our own who needs our assistance. Susan Hu has been blogging on Kos, Booman Tribune and more recently on No Quarter for some years now, but her health issues call us to action today.

Susan can’t walk more than a few steps with a cane or walker. She can’t bend over. She can’t sweep, make her bed, or reach the bottom shelves or drawer of her refrigerator. The slightest odd movement makes her scream in pain. She can barely lift her feet, and often can’t go out because the two small steps down/up her back door are too scary, and she can’t go into the laundry room because of its small steps. Taking a shower is frightening. She can no longer drive more than two miles without intense knee and back pain. Riding in a car is also very painful. Sitting in the drive-through at the pharmacy is agonizing. The intense burning pain in her thighs and knees gets worse when she lies down, and she can’t sleep more than an hour or two each day.

The local doctors told her it was her back (she does have significant lumbar damage). She complained to doctors for years about hip pain, but they always said it was bursitis. They sent her to a neurosurgery unit, which kept examining her but couldn’t determine the problem. Last spring, they advised she go to a rehabilitation medicine physician to get more flexible and stronger, and get an exercise program.

The rehab doctor watched her walk and within five minutes told her it was her hips, not her back, he suspected. The x-rays he ordered showed that both hips are “shot” — there is no cartilage and the bone has disintegrated and presses against her femur bone, creating bone-on-bone pain. That doctor is now her hero for looking at her with “fresh eyes.” The rehabilitation doctor recommended against any pre-surgery exercise program because her condition is too delicate. (The orthopedic surgeon concurred.) She does lift weights to keep her arms strong.

It took two months to see the orthopedic surgeon who told her that her situation is complex, and that she needs significant repair of both her back and her hips. He puzzled about which to tackle first. He decided on replacing both of her hips with implants. Then he’ll tackle her lumbar region. While she is in the hospital, she will receive radiation because, he told her that he could see a lot of bone spurs, which means her body tends to grow bone spurs. The radiation will keep the cells, post-surgery, from creating new bone spurs near the implants. He said normal stay is 3 days but she’ll be in the hospital for 7 days so that the rehabilitation doctor and physical therapists can work with her. She will then go to an after-care facility.

Her bilateral hip replacement surgery is in three weeks but she just found out that she has significant dental cares and a couple infected teeth. She must be infection-free seven days before surgery because implants are at high risk for infection. Because she had no idea she needed so much work done, and had to wait for a dentist appointment, she didn’t have time to sign up for dental insurance. She is going to a dental school to have the work done, but it still will cost over $2,000, and she has travel and living expenses. Her daughter lives nearby but in a three-story walk-up, so Susan has to stay in a motel. She has a bit of savings, but it’ll be gone long before the dental work is completed. Susan recently shared the following with me:

One thing I forgot to mention is that I’ve been declared disabled and can’t work since 2005 because of my back and other injuries but only recently got any health insurance and was paying for all care for two years before that. The new health insurance I’ll get in September will cover my surgery, but the premiums cost over $300 per month, with no dental coverage.

Susan Hu’s predicament is one of many caused by our nation’s failure to provide health care for its citizens. Because she is one of “our own” netroots family, I am asking you to contribute what you can today to support Susan Hu and help her come back to the front lines of the blogosphere and realize her dreams of renewed health and strength. If we can raise $4,000 to keep her afloat until she comes back, we will be doing a lot for this member of OUR community. We can do this for Susan Hu. Go here now, go to “Send Money” and enter Susan’s email address: susanunpc@gmail.com. Thank you.

  • PrchrLady

    Thank you Leslie for posting this. i somehow missed it on Booman, so was especially glad to see you post it here on NQ. Susan is a good friend, and as a person who has delt with the mis adventure of the ‘health care’ system debacle, I am most happy to help out.

    I don’t do pay pal anymore because of the trouble I had with them in the past. Don’t know if there are others who feel that way, but if so, and you still want to help, email me and I will send a snail mail address that you can use for contributions. My email address is Mpumpky@yahoo dot com…

  • Sandy

    Thank you, Leslie and PreacherLady. So so sorry to hear about Susan’s health crises! I don’t do PayPal, PL, for the same reasons you cite. So, I’ll e-mail you and send a check to your snail mail address. Thanks for that!

    Get well soon, Susan! You’ve done such great work here. We had no idea you’ve been in such pain! Sending you blessings and keeping you in my prayers.

  • larry johnson

    I’m making my donation to Susan. She has not asked for this. This fund drive was the idea of folks like leslie and others who are aware of Susan’s health crisis. Me, I’m self-interested. I need her in fighting shape to keep this blog operating like a swiss watch. The beauty of blogs is that you get to meet and befriend folks like Susan who, in the snail mail world, you would rarely encounter.

  • http://noquarterusa.net/blog/ Leslie

    Susan definitely didn’t ask me to post this, and she probably doesn’t even know about it yet. Because she emailed me earlier to say, she’d just returned from her dentist’s office with a mouth full of cotton and she was exhausted. Her dentist is in another city, and she had to fly there and back. She’d been up since 5 a.m. the previous day. So she’s probably still resting. She needs to return to her dentist for more pre-surgery work too.

    If anyone has a chance, check out all the comments and well wishes Susan has been receiving at Booman and DailyKos. She has a lot of friends who care about her and hope she’ll get better soon.

    I made my donation! It wasn’t a lot, but every bit helps.

  • Shirin

    What a shame for Susan to have this added stress and burden on top of the pain she has been suffering, and the stress of the impending surgeries and all that accompanies them! One can only hope that at the very least her pain and lack of mobility will be relieved at the end of all this!

  • Anonymous

    At the risk of sounding cold – Why not help all the Susans by providing universal health care?

    • Blair Miller

      I think it is a great idea. I have no health insurance. Due to the fact that my husband beat me up thus a divorce etc. He got away with it all and I have several health problems from Fibromyaligia to spinal stenosis and nodules on my lungs. I can’t go to a Dr. SSI has not yet been approved. In this country that there are people who are really sick and can’t get help is a disgrace.

  • wethornet

    SusanUnPc, do what you have to get better girl.

    I have basked in your praise of stuff I’ve posted here at NQ, or encouragement you’ve given me re: my writing a book about post WW2 America. I have a poem for you in a separate post.

    Preacher Lady, thank you for what you’re doing. My preference is snail mail. I have an email in to you.

    Leslie, thanks for bringing this to everyone’s attention. (Didn’t know about the tributes elsewhere; look forward to reading them when I get a few minutes.)

    Larry, if you want, we can talk via email. Then set up a phone call. I can help by providing “copy”/posts 1-2-3x a week. Your call. You email me. (And my posts are raw at times and I just let it fly; my copy is more under control. Focused. Tighter. Ranger sniper motto in Nam: OSOK. One Shot, One Kill.)

  • wethornet

    This poem is for SusanUnPc, for the inspiration that she has provided in her work her at No Quarter.

    Get well girl. Keep your spirits up. Mental hygiene is important.

    This poem is, in my humble opinion, is in a category I call “quantum awesome.” WIthout further ado…

    “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.
    Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
    It is our light not our darkness that most frightens us.
    Your playing small does not serve the world.
    There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you.
    We were all meant to shine as children do.
    It’s not just in some of us.
    It’s in everyone.
    And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same.
    As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.”

    –Marianne Williamson from A Return to Love

  • Titus Pullo

    Been some time since I posted here…sorry to hear of these health issues. HEre is my 2 cents: I’ve heard amazing things about hip resurfacing as opposed to hip replacement. ’60 Minutes’ did a piece about it a couple years ago and it really stuck in my mind. It seemed like a much better alternative, I don’t know if its too late for you to look into or not, but you really should look into it. They do the procedure in Thailand and India, and believe it or not, the facilities in Thailand are cheaper and better than what we have to offer. Here are some links:

    http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/hip-resurfacing/AN01550
    http://www.udel.edu/PR/Messenger/04/04/medical.html
    http://www.aarp.org/bulletin/yourhealth/a2004-10-14-hiprepair.html?print=yes

    “Six months after surgeon Myron Stachniw began performing an alternative to total hip replacement called resurfacing in U.S. clinical trials, he reached a conclusion: He wanted the procedure himself. “I had severe arthritis in both hips, which was really limiting my activities,” says Stachniw, 57, of Galesburg, Ill. “When I saw how well my patients were doing after resurfacing, it didn’t take too long before I figured out, ‘This is for me.’ ”

    Good luck Susan!

  • Thinker

    Susan’s timing is lousy, I must say.

    My mother has decided to come out to Australia for the second time in 5 years and Sydney isn’t good enough for her. So I have had to organise a plush hotel and a flight to Melbourne. To make matters worse I have purchased an entire suite of new furniture (it needed to be done) as well.

    Anyway enuff anout me. Thankyou President Bush for stuffing the US currency. This means that a paltry Australian dollar is now worth as little as a US dollar, or thereabouts. Thankyou President Bush.

    Because of that, I shall refer to my heart and see if my wallet will grant access for this cause. My wallet is usually offbounds, else it would be perpetually empty. But this is a special case as Susan has tirelessly provided a good read her fellow sycophants & occasional crusader.

    It is interesting reflecting on the analogy of this situation. One thousand well wishers and protesters aren’t worth a damn. Only three ingedients will do: fine doctors, God’s blessing and most importantly money to buy the fine doctors’ service. After that all well wishers can be cherished and revered.

  • Mart

    Thanks for the post Leslie – and Susan, when you read this, hang tough lady. Amazing you have put so much passion and brilliance into No Quarter while enduring such hardship and pain. Like Larry said, you keep the place running like a swiss watch.

    I’ve funded my PayPal account this evening – as soon as it clears I’ll send it over.

  • oldtree

    done and hope we are up past the 2K by now!

  • Centrocitta

    Get well soon, Susan. I know what you are suffering. I had orthopaedic/neuro surgery on my spine when I was 30 years old. Hospitalized for one month, a year recovery process after that and a life that was changed forever due to some physical limitations. But I was fortunate in that I had great doctors on the East Coast who did their residencies at the E.I. duPont Institute in Delaware. Hopefully, the medical profession has made even more strides in Ortho/Neuro surgery and you will also receive the best of care from your doctors.

  • Centrocitta

    By the way, my surgery was done at Northern Virginia Doctor’s Hospital in Arlington. How much would anyone care to guess that I paid back in 1976 for extensive surgery, one month hospitalization, medications, follow-up care, etc., while keeping the roof over my head? The answer is Niente. Nada. Nothing. My, how times have changed in the USA. Mainly for this reason, I now live in the European Union, where as an EU citizen, I also receive totally free, universal healthcare in the system that is reported to be second only to France.

  • http://noquarterusa.net/ SusanUnPC

    Thank you everyone — first, and foremost, Leslie for going to all this effort. Thank you so much, Larry, for your generosity — I just hope we get everything set up within the next week. So far, so good.

    Thanks to all of you for your kind words and, from many of you, donations. It means the world although — true confession — it also makes me really shy. I always prefer to be on the giving end. Give me some stray cats to feed or a hard-up neighbor who needs some groceries.

    Re some comments:
    1) We do need universal health care. The current system leaves too much to chance. If I’d had good insurance, I would have made an appt. to see an orthopedic surgeon myself, and probably have had all this behind me already. (I knew the current group of local docs weren’t “hip” to my problems, but I was wholly dependent on them for referrals, xrays, etc.)

    2) I wish I could have hip resurfacing, but I think I’m too far gone for it.

    3) A few months ago, I joined a support mailing list, and have been astonished by the stories. There are so many teenagers and young adults who need hip replacement or resurfacing — this is because of medications they had to take for cancer, for lupus, for sickle cell anemia, etc. (There’s also a man in Ethiopia on the list — he’s in the kind of bone-on-bone pain that I’m in, but he doesn’t even have the chance I’ve got. One list member got him the promise of surgery at a Christian hospital in Ethiopia, by an American surgeon who practices there, but the hospital can’t afford to pay for the impant (@ $5K), and so he’s stuck. He can’t work anymore, and he had to ship his children to relatives. The list members have tried various fundraisers like RobinHood,com, none of which have worked so far. He wrote the list last month that he feels suicidal, and I totally identify with that. If I won the lottery, he’d get it done. If anyone has any ideas, please share. He haunts me.)

    4) Please don’t take steroids if you can help it. I was bad off two years ago, but really went downhill after the local docs put me on a long course of Prednisone. It caused me innumerable side effects — hypokylemia (dangerously low potassium), very high blood pressure, infection from a suppressed immune system, and excruciating pain. When I complained to the local doctor, one kept telling me the only side effect is weight gain (which I didn’t have). Another doctor asked if my intense thigh/knee pain was Restless Leg Syndrome. My daughter ended up forcing me into her car and driving me to a Trauma ER in Seattle where the ER doctor found all of the above side effects and immediately began treating me. He lectured me how I could have died from the hypokylemia or the bladder infection — neither of which I knew I had although I’d diligently gone to the local docs to report the terrible pain. I don’t know what they’ve got against blood tests. Furthermore, steroids can cause osteonecrosis (bone death), which is probably why I had such intense pain while on the steroids and for months afterwards. (It’s really important, obviously, that one get the best doctors and also be assertive, which I have a tendency not to be.)

    Centrocitta, I’m so glad you had great doctors. And how smart of you to move to a country that has great health care. It’s essential. Those systems are so much more humane. Jerome A Paris, a banker in Paris who posts at Daily Kos all the time, has a young son with recurring brain cancer. The French government pays his wife to stay at home and care for their son. That’s humane treatment.

  • Anonymous

    The doctor take just five minutes to told you that problems in your hip. I think your hip bone is weak or break from anywhere. you should need of hip surgery… hip replacement recall

  • Onofres arm

    Hey Susan, maybe if you had the self discipline to shed a ton of lard, your knees and back wouldn’t be giving you so many problems. I have ZERO doubt that the pain you’re experiencing is self inflicted (remember, I’m an EMT, and I’ve witnessed many poor and pathetic people in your condition), but, of course,  you would NEVER admit to such, it’s soooooo much more fun and sooooo much more attention grabbing to exploit sympathy through the revolting liberal campaign of “life is so unfair” which dictates that the rest of us should bear the burden of the lousy decisions and lifestyles of irresponsible people, like you, living within our society. 

    Normally, I’m inclined to see the better nature of people who might have obesity problems, medical issues, and mental deficiencies, because most of the folks with such severe problems are people who  would never hesitate giving whatever generosity they could offer to others, but in your case, you’ve displayed your progressive venom far too often to merit any sympathy from me, because you’re constant nastiness, bile, and vindictiveness prevent any doubt of your warped intentions, and so I’m afraid I can’t offer you any sympathy.  

  • Onofres arm

    Hey Susan, you were a regular contributor to Daily Kos? HA! Why am I not surprised. I’m sure that the “regulars” at NoQ would just love to know how popular you were at the Kos.