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The Unnecessary Death of My Aunt, Hazel

Cynthiaby Cynthia McKinney
Over 83,000 blacks die unnecessary and premature deaths each year due to their treatment after they arrive in a doctor's office.” This week, Ms. McKinney's aunt became one of them.
 
 
The Unnecessary Death of My Aunt, Hazel
by Cynthia McKinney
The author is a former U.S. Representative from Georgia and 2008 Green Party candidate for President of the United States.
My aunt, while still in intensive care, was forced to be transferred to the hospital that had, in my opinion, committed a capital crime.”
I never want you to take the journey that I'm currently on. So, I want to tell you about it.
It starts on the front of the refrigerator. "The Healthiest Foods on Earth." A two-page primer from apple to watermelon, touting immunity to male fertility support. Inside the refrigerator, natural and organic foods only. On the countertop is the Jack LaLanne juicer, the Magic Bullet, the handy food chopper plus, the food saver vacuum sealer--all items familiar to us because they are constantly hawked on the midnight cable channels. Hanging from the kitchen cabinet door are plastic bags for recycling: one for plastics, the other for aluminum cans. The house and car are filled with reusable shopping bags made of recycled materials. By the way, a new car was in the works, and not because of the cash for clunkers program of the Federal Government. An American-made hybrid was preferred--keeping U.S. workers working. In the back seat of her Ford Focus is a booklet, "Living in a Healthy Body: A New Look at Health & Weight." What I'm trying to describe is someone working very hard at changing a typically indulgent "American" lifestyle into one more respectful and healthy for the body, healthy for our earth.
So, in an act of preventive medical care, my aunt Hazel went to the doctor to have a colonoscopy. We are all bombarded with television commercials advising us to have a colonoscopy. I know in the black media, those ads abound. And so, dutifully, my aunt abided by those suggestions for healthy choices and had her first colonoscopy. What the family knows is that her colon was perforated. That's when our journey took us on a wrong turn.
“My aunt abided by suggestions for healthy choices and had her first colonoscopy.”
Unfortunately, the facility that performed the colonoscopy had told my aunt not to call before the results were published and that would take up to two weeks!!! When my aunt called them because she was feeling so bad, they told her that she'd be ok overnight and that they would call her in the morning. The hospital told my aunt to go to sleep overnight and they'd call her back in the morning. But my aunt-tee continued to deteriorate so badly that her daughter called 9-1-1 and by the morning, my aunt-tee was already in surgery at another hospital that was not too busy to care for her. This is when the perforation was discovered and repaired.
While my aunt was recovering in the second hospital, in intensive care, a letter was sent from the hospital where the colonoscopy was performed stating that they were the insured's provider and that the hospital performing the emergency surgery would not get paid. The hospital performing the colonoscopy demanded my aunt-tee back. So, against the desires of the hospital providing the emergency surgery, my aunt, while still in intensive care, was forced to be transferred to the hospital that had, in my opinion, committed a capital crime.
My aunt-tee deteriorated after the transfer, but fought like heck to live. Unfortunately, her body had been so poisoned by the doctor's failure to recognize that he had perforated her colon that her body became toxic. The third affront to my aunt-tee's health and life occurred when morphine was administered, ostensibly for pain and gave her such a blow to her vital statistics that the family objected to a second administration of morphine. But guess what!!! She was given morphine again, despite her children's complaints!!!! My aunt never recovered from that.
My aunt, a divorced mother of two, struggled to live righteously. Those of you in southern California know that she accompanied me almost everywhere I went. She was a hard-working woman, a proud homeowner in Watts, a student working on her Social Work degree, finally able to achieve her dreams after deferring them for so long in order to help her children realize theirs. She also took to the campaign trail too many times, traveling to Georgia to help my father and me realize ours. I can't even believe that she's gone--through no fault of her own--and I'm still wondering how the heck my aunt ended up in this place despite all the care she took of herself. This is unfathomable to me. And sadly, too many families are arriving at this same place. Iraqi families devastated by U.S. occupation; Afghani families devastated by U.S. war; U.S. families also devastated by U.S. policy makers. Why?
“Her body had been so poisoned by the doctor's failure to recognize that he had perforated her colon that her body became toxic.”
For the last four years, I've spouted off the racial quality-of-life disparities that exist in our country. I've said it so much, it's as if no one heard me. Because even during my tenure in Congress, I gave floor speeches, but the policy change never came. I spoke at banquets and conventions about it, but the policy changes never came. Two steps forward always seemed to end with one step backward. If we got the money appropriated, in too many instances, black institutions couldn't be in charge of it, so only a trickle at best reached the community. I found that the "plantation" was alive and well in patterns of federal spending. So when Dr. David Satcher, President Clinton's Surgeon General, found in a 2005 study that over 83,000 blacks die unnecessary and premature deaths each year due to their treatment after they arrive in a doctor's office, among other factors, I added that datum to my panoply of quality-of-life stats. And now, my aunt factors in Dr. Satcher's numbers.
I have seen such betrayal and lack of principle in the current "health care" debate, I had no intention of getting into it. In our Power to the People campaign, I wrote a platform that included policy recommendations to eliminate all disparities still extant in our society, including for health care. A single-payer system is so obviously needed, it should be too politically costly for our Democratic majority in the Congress and our Democratic White House to do anything else. I recommended an end to war. I advocated public ownership of the Federal Reserve. I even anticipated the skullduggery of the bailouts and recommended that if the "powers that be" were intent on forcing Congress to give these bailouts to institutions that conducted what I would call criminal behavior, then at a minimum, a credible person like David Walker, former U.S. Comptroller, should audit all corporations and institutions receiving such funds. I suggested that Senator Obama use the power of his Senatorial pen to amend the bailout legislation to this effect. It didn't happen.
'I'm still wondering how the heck my aunt ended up in this place despite all the care she took of herself.”
My aunt-tee had a policy of rarely voting for an incumbent. She understood that just as she was trying to change herself into a lifestyle that she could believe in, she wasn't going to get political, social, and economic change that she could believe in by voting like everyone else, for the same special interest candidates. Once she decided that it was necessary to step outside of the box of political conformity, she discovered that there were Independent, Green Party, Libertarian, and other political party candidates on her ballot that she had long ignored. She began to listen to them and learned to explore the totality of her options. It was glorious to watch my aunt-tee's liberation.
So why is she in the morgue now?
Not enough people took that journey with her. Not enough people saw her example. Not enough was done to change policy. At a time when the policy makers have never been so divorced from the reality borne by the average citizens that they govern, the American people have shown an amazing ability to accept graft, corruption, death, and destruction while continuing to believe that hope alone can produce real change. Why did Cindy Sheehan protest without thousands in front of President Obama's $50,000 a week vacation home?
“Over 83,000 blacks die unnecessary and premature deaths each year due to their treatment after they arrive in a doctor's office.”
I've tried to walk my talk. Just last week it came out that one "journalist" who called for my lynching was on the FBI payroll at the time of his comment. He claims to have been paid to say provocative things. I've withstood a lot--for the people. But now, I really don't know how much more walking or talking I'm able to do. I just wonder, how many more will have to experience this before more people write their own Declarations of Independence from this political disorder.

The phone just rang and it was the hospital that performed the botched colonoscopy on my aunt, that ignored her call for help, that demanded that she be transferred while she was in intensive care, that administered morphine twice, despite objections from the family and from which her vitals never recovered. They wanted to know how my aunt would rate their service. I told them poor on every count.
Thank you for reading this with empathy and I thank you all for your support. I apologize for any appointments that I've missed while I've been on the road to this place I'm in now.

Ms. McKinney can be contacted at hg2600(at)gmail.com.
 

 

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It is not because of doctors

It is not because of doctors fault but it is natural, and I think it may not happen in future.

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Sorry to hear that

Is that possible this thing will not happen again? All the victims may rest in peace! fatburningfurnace

Condolences

Dear Ms. McKinney:
I'm very sorry to learn your aunt's story, which is all too common in our medical profit system. Not all medical risk can be eliminated, but how many unnecessry deaths can we prevent? I'm sick of hearing scoundrels blame patients for their "lifestyle choices" and your story puts the lie to their propaganda.
 
My own father, less than one year after "hernia" surgery, died from massive colon cancer. My mother, waited in a coma in her bed at home, while our neighbor, a doctor, pleaded with his own hospital to get an ambulance there, too late. I sympathize with your grief.
 
But I have to say your courageous voice is needed, especially when it seems darkest, when it seems that no one is listening--we are.  Cynthia McKinney is one of the few voices in Congress, or anywhere, that I can have any respect for. You may not know how great a loss your absence would bring. Best wishes.
 
 
 

re: The Unnecessary Death of My Aunt, Hazel

It is with a heart full of sorrow the death of Cynthia’s maternal aunt. Hazel was not sick and took all preventive measures to live a long life. She went to have a colonoscopy and her colon was punctured. What else went wrong during the procedure is still unknown to the family. Hazel survived Jim Crow but could not survive the health care system. Cynthia is deeply affected by this tragic event. She was very close to her aunt and Hazel loved her niece. Hazel was a fervent supporter of Cynthia’s six terms in Congress and was so happy to see her niece run for President of the United States in 2008. It is hard to accept that she is no more. I just hope that they will be able to do something about this without using any cash advance.

My condolences to Ms.

My condolences to Ms. McKinney and her family.  It is difficult to find perspective sometimes in emotional times.  I have long admired Ms. McKinney and will continue to support her good works.  Just a few points, however.  First, a perforation is an uncommon but known complication of colonoscopy which is discussed during informed consent.  I would not assume the doctor did something wrong with regard to a perforation.  Did a physician actually speak with the patient when she called with her concerns? There is a possibility that there were a couple of layers of people between the doctor and her.  Second, the patient or the physicians at the second hospital could have refused the transfer.  Do not interpret this in any way as "blaming the victim" as some you reading this have already done.  Decisions like this ultimately come down to the expected risk of an adverse event occurring as a result of the action and the resources involved in carrying out the action.  Third, capital crime?  Does Ms. McKinney now support the death penalty?  Fourth, what evidence is there that any of the actions or inactions that may have contributed to this patient's death were a result of this patient's skin color?  Fifth, sometimes what a doctor says and what a patient or family member hears are not the same.  I have witnessed this in my own family.
 
I know that politicians of all stripes use anecdotes and hyperbole to fan the flames of emotional political debate.  The one side that we have been presented--in a manner to place culpability--should not serve as the single perspective from which to view this particular series of events.  I do agree that this anecdote illustrates problems in our current medical care delivery system.  I strongly support a single-payer system and evidence-based medicine.  I hope the United States of America will have a single-payer system soon.  
 
I send my wishes for strength, perseverance, and perspective to Ms. McKinney and mostly my immense gratitude for her courage and determination.

Your story above, has also

Your story above, has also happened with my brother. omissions that occurred is difficult to prove. then I can only pray this is the best thing for my family. I pray also for you.
 
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Cynthia, I'm praying for you

Words can no express my feelings of appreciation for all the things you've done.
You are truly a voice that needs to be heard. Unfortunately, there are those that are trying to squelch it.
I pray for your spirit, but more so for those who need to hear, understand and rally behind true change.
May God bless you.
 
Keep the faith my sister.

My condolences to you and your family. A lot of people have

stories of harrowing neglect, mistreatment.
Perhaps this could be a "lightning rod" for single payer,
good care for all, with justice. And fairness and decency
from the care providers. (I am disabled by illness and
know many stories.  Sad, indeed.)