Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Medicine and Thanksgiving


SPORTS, HEALTH CARE AND THANKSGIVING
 

Health care remains at the top of the news. It’s that rare subject that affects EVERYONE.


The medical arena is proximate to the sports arena. Just consider the Red Sox. How fortunate it was that John Lackey's surgery and rehab worked out the way it did. Ditto for Clay Buchholz. And Jacoby Ellsbury. I'm glad that the physical ailments of David Ortiz and Dustin Pedroia received world-class medical attention. And how great was it that John Lester beat cancer?
 

EVERYONE has health issues to some degreeincluding big, strong sports columnists like me. OK, I'll use the first-person, singular pronoun. I've noted that the great columnist George Will never uses "I" or "me," but I'm not him and will go ahead and personalize things.


Sports fans don't usually pick up a newspaper to find out the latest on someone's health. Unless, of course, they want to know how soon Aaron Rogers might return to form with the Packers, if they want to bet on Green Bay. But having recently spent some time in a hospital, medical thoughts have been bouncing around my brain.


My hospital stay was prompted by worsening run times in 5K road races. When my friend and colleague Fred King of Colebrook and Loudon beat me in a race, I knew it was time to chat with a doctor. Eventually I had a cardiac ablation procedure which appeared to clear up an irregularity. But while in the hospital and while rehabbing, I had plenty of time to think, and I figured out that I/we live in a wonderful time and place where things get fixed that used to sideline peopleor worse.

 
So thank you, Dr. Chadosh, for your great work. I don't know what you make, but it should be at least half as much as the Red Sox pay Jarrod Saltalamacchia!
 

It took a few days for the effects of general anesthesia to wear off, and I thought of earlier sports medical situations. Everything from ankle sprains to stitches to finger dislocations to poison ivy infectionsfrom looking for lost golf balls. My first hospital visit came about in 1980 after being sucker-punched in the eye during a basketball game. My eyesight returned but in 2010 I required a serious vitrectomy procedure after "floaters" significantly obscured my vision. Kudos to all the personnel at Bethesda Naval Medical Center for all they did and thank you Captain Blice, USN, for your surgical prowess. The Navy should pay you at least half as much as the Red Sox pay Ryan Dempster.


Before retiring my Marine Corps uniform, I made another 2010 trip to Bethesda, where Lieutenant Commander Humphries expertly repaired a glaring hernia situation. Thank you Doctor Humphries. I hope the Navy pays you at least half as much as the Red Sox pay Johnny Gomes.


A side effect of the vitrectomy was a cataract, which was expertly removed last year in Concord. Thank you, Dr. Wasserman, for your great work. I hope you earn at least half as much as the Red Sox pay Jake Peavy.

 
At my age, it is a joy to participatepain freein road races or in NBA basketball (Noontime Basketball Association) at NHTI-Concord. Basketball battles had earlier taken a toll on the joints, resulting in torn meniscuses in both knees. Thank you, Dr. Moran, for your great orthopedic work during those 2005 and 2008 operations. The wheels have been working great ever since. I wish your arthroscopic procedures were around years ago for the Bobby Orrs and Joe Namaths of the world. I hope you make at least half as much as the Red Sox pay Will Middlebrooks.

 
So after my successful procedure, I received a letter from my insurance company. Having heard that millions of Americans are likely to lose their health insurance, and knowing of cancer patients who’ve already had their coverage terminated, I looked at the letter with trepidationthe way I’d look at a letter from the IRS or from any attorney-at-law.

 
I finally opened it and ….. I read that my company was going to cover the full cost of the procedure. Good news. But it’s too bad so many of us have to have this new trepidation about health insurance. It’s not healthy.


It IS healthy to count one’s blessings, and to appreciate that we live in an age where a typical American can access health technologies, medical procedures, and extraordinary doctors to get things fixed that would have gone unfixed a generation agoeven if you were a king, a rich Sultan, or a U.S. President.


So Happy Thanksgiving!
 
 
(And watch out, Fred King. I’m BACK!)

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Mike Durant - Twenty Years Since "Black Hawk Down!"


NEW HAMPSHIRE’S MIKE DURANT – A HERO’S ODYSSEY

 

It’s now been twenty years since that October day in Somalia when Mike Durant saw what hell looked like. A Black Hawk helicopter pilot, Durant was shot down during the battle for Mogadishu. All the members of his crew were dead. A rescue team moved him away from the aircraft and placed him next to a wall. But now they, too, were all dead. Durant had a broken leg, a broken back and was out of ammunition when a horde of Somalis descended upon him, intent on beating him to death. Already suffering a bullet wound, Durant helplessly endured the blows. A Somali fighter smashed Durant’s face and broke Mike’s nose and eye socket with what Mike first thought was a club. Then, to his horror, Durant realized he was being beaten to death with the severed arm of one of his comrades. He knew his death was imminent and then he heard a gunshot.


BERLIN BOY


Forty years ago Mike Durant boarded a ski bus in Berlin to head north on Route 16 and then west on Route 26 with dozens of other youngsters to ski at the Wilderness Ski Area in Dixville Notch.


“I loved skiing,” Durant recalled in a recent interview. “I loved the snow. Like so many other North Country boys, I also loved getting out into the woods and hunting. And yes, I also played hockey.”


That Durant played hockey was no surprise, Berlin being “Hockey-Town USA.”


As that ski bus headed for the slopes Durant’s friends in adjacent seats surely had no inkling that in 1993 their buddy’s face would be the first one featured simultaneously on the covers of TIME, NEWSWEEK, and U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT. That bruised and bloodied face became the face of an American military encounter that would change the country and the worldthe first battle with Al Qaeda.


AMERICAN HOSTAGE

 
The gunshot was meant to quiet, not to kill. A Somali leader with some authority saw that Durant had more value as a hostage/prisoner than as a corpse. Dirt was thrown into Durant’s face and a rag was stuffed down his throat. His agony became excruciating when his captors kicked his broken bones and then he realized was “being carried aloft on the thundering wave of a mosh pit from hell.”


It was October 3, and Durant would face 11 days of agonizing captivity as followers of Somali warlord Mohamed Farah Aideed stared down the United States. They used Durant as a pawn so tribal fighters could seek concessions from an American superpower caught up in an unexpectedly brutal urban battleground. Durant was confined to a small room to be interrogated and indoctrinated by select Somalis who knew some English. His wounds were not treated, but he was given water and allowed to live, as negotiations continued between Somalis and Americans.
 

Though the Americans did not know Durant’s location and could not rescue him, they knew he was alive. A helicopter flew over Mogadishu with loudspeakers blaring: “Mike Durant! We will not leave without you!”


The messages gave Durant hope, but he knew he was dying from his wounds and was running out of time.


“If you guys are preparing a rescue mission, you’d better hurry,” Durant thought. “Or else you’ll be rescuing a corpse.”


The pain worsened by the hour as Durant suffered in the brutal African heat. When he could, he’d drift off into a semi-sleep and dream of skiing at Wilderness and of white Christmases in New Hampshireand then awaken to his agonizing reality.


It never snows in Mogadishu.


DREAMS OF FLYING

 
Durant’s father was a sergeant in the N.H. National Guard and Mike always respected the military. After a pilot named Joe Brigham took Durant for a flight over Mt. Washington, Mike dreamed of becoming an army pilot. He enlisted after graduating from Berlin High School in 1979. He survived basic training and follow-on schools and eventually flight school. After earning his wings he was assigned to the 101st Airborne Division at Fort Campbell, Kentucky and soon qualified for The United States Army’s elite 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne), also known as the Night Stalkers. Durant’s career took him to Korea, Panama, and the Persian Gulf for Operation Desert Storm.


During that 1991conflict Durant flew missions deep into Iraq, looking for SCUD missiles, eventually finding a site and firing it up. He also experienced the pain of losing comrades.


“Flying in combat can be an adventure,” recalled Durant. “But when you lose people it brings you back to reality and you remember how so many people pay the ultimate price in war.”

 
SURVIVAL


Durant’s best-selling 2003 book “In the Company of Heroes” provided material for this story. It chronicles his Somali ordeal.


“October 9, 1993. On my seventh day as a prisoner of war, I found religion …. Literally …” 


Durant’s captors allowed a “Care Package” to be delivered to him and among its items was a Bible. Not only did Durant draw inspiration from certain passages, but he wrote coded notes in special places, thinking that his captors would let him keep the Holy Book when he was released and the notes might prove invaluable in piecing things together later on.


Negotiations continued while Durant lay a prisoner and American officials conveyed to Aideed’s people that very, very, very bad things would happen to all of them if Durant didn’t survive. Finally, on October 14, with the help of the International Red Cross, the Granite Stater and his Bible were placed on a stretcher and transported to an exchange point where he was reunited with his countrymen.


Mike Durant had escaped from hell.


A HUMANITARIAN MISSION

 
American involvement in Somalia came about during the last days of the Bush Administration, in December of 1992. The country had descended into lawless chaos, which combined with famine meant that tens of thousands were dying of starvation. Because competing warlords were preventing food and humanitarian assistance from getting to the starving people, American military forces embarked upon Operation Restore Hope to secure food distribution points and routes. The mission evolved during 1993, as forces from the U.S. and elsewhere were inevitably drawn into the internecine fighting. The Clinton administration significantly increased the American military presence in Somalia and eventually the Americans were seen as opponents to Aideed, the most prominent warlord. Food distribution was threatened and both sides took casualties. Eventually a major mission was planned for October 3 to capture Aideed and his top lieutenants. While many of the targeted individuals were indeed captured, the mission was disrupted when a Black Hawk helicopter was shot down by a rocket propelled grenade. Later, Durant’s helicopter was also shot down. The battle resulted in 18 American deaths, with 80 wounded. Estimates of Somali casualties range from 1,500 to 3,000.
 

BACK TO AMERICA

 
Given the severity of his wounds and injuries, Durant’s rehabilitation took a long time, but he still dreamed of flying again. He was told that the prospect of rejoining the Night Stalkers in a flight status was doubtful, but he persevered. In 1995 he ran the Marine Corps Marathon to prove his fitness and eventually he did again fly Black Hawks.
 

In 2001 Durant retired from the Army and married Lisa desRoches, the widow of a helicopter pilot who was killed on a training mission. The two have worked together to raise six children. They live in Huntsville, Alabama, where Mike runs his own company, Pinnacle Solutions, an engineering and training services business that develops flight simulators and the like. Durant received the "2013 Vetrepreneur Award" for his company’s efforts on behalf of veterans. Pinnacle Solutions has grown steadily and now employs 81 people.


During an October 29th interview, Durant explained that the events from October of 1993 are always with him. He speaks candidly about American policies and policy-makers.


“Looking back, I wish that the Clinton administration would have been more responsive to the requests they received from the leaders on the ground in Somalia,” said Durant. “Three things in particular would have made us more successful. An aircraft carrier would have been a huge plus. As it was, we were sleeping 50 yards from the bad guys on the ground. Requested AC-130 gunships would have come in handy on Oct. 3 and 4. And leaders on the ground requested we have tanks and armored vehicles which were never deliveredwhich is why we suffered so many casualties.”


Secretary of Defense Les Aspin took the fall. He resigned in December of 1993 and died in 1995.


“I met Secretary Aspin at a memorial ceremony at Fort Bragg,” said Durant. “He could see the consequences of his decision-making on the faces of the families there. I think it contributed to his death.”


Meeting the families of Gary Gordon and Randy Shughart was especially poignant for Durant. The two soldiers were Delta Force operators who jumped from a helicopter to try to protect Durant and the crash site. Both were killed and each received the Congressional Medal of Honor.

 
“When I first saw Gary and Randy I thought I’d been saved,” recalled Durant. It was the greatest feeling. Then I realized it was only those two, against hundreds of Somalis. They never had a chance.”


Durant treasures a letter he received from Randy’s widow, Stephanie, which thanked him for giving Randy’s death a purpose. “I can look at you and see that his efforts were not in vain… Because of your bravery and refusal to be captured, I can sleep at night.”


Durant likens the Somali experience to the Vietnam experience, in that American forces were hamstrung by politics. He added that he has been asked repeatedly about the 2012 Benghazi fiasco where four Americans died in Libya.

 
“Benghazi was like Somalia in that our people didn’t get the support they deserved and they paid for it with their lives.”


Naturally, Durant has seen Ridley Scott’s movie “Black Hawk Down.”  Actor Ron Eldard played Durant in the movie.


“Ron seemed like a good guy,” recalled Durant, who met many cast members. “Although he really didn’t look, talk, or act like me. They mostly seemed like good guys, although Jeremy Piven was an ass.”


Piven played Cliff Wolcott, the pilot of the first Black Hawk shot down.

 

TODAY
 

Today Mike and Lisa Durant live in Huntsville. Three of their six children still live at home. The youngest, Michael, is an ice hockey player.


In Alabama?


“Yep,” said Durant. “We have ice in Alabama. And Michael’s on a travel team, decisively engaged in ice hockey operations. The problem is that the trips can be long ones. Like a 7 ½ hour drive to Columbus, Ohio.”


Durant often thinks of New Hampshire and savors his visits “home.”
 

“Of course I was excited to see the Red Sox in the World Series,” said Durant. “But it broke my heart to hear that Wilderness Ski Area closed.”


Durant was in the Granite State last winter to play in the Concord Black Ice Pond Hockey Tournament at White’s Park.


How did he do?


“Well, I’m proud to say that my team was the ‘Over-40 B-Division’ champs,” said Durant.

 
You can take the man out of Hockey-Town, but you can’t take Hockey-Town out of the man!