http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dallas/tsw/stories/102703dntexso
ldierstory.1b17f.html
Soldier contracts Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (the human form of
Mad Cow Disease)-was it From the fetal calf serum used in vaccines?
A quote from the article:
"In 2001, certain vaccine manufacturers admitted that they were using
fetal calf serum and other materials from cattle raised in countries at
high risk for mad cow disease, in spite of years of warnings from the Food
and Drug Administration. The vaccines include those to prevent polio,
diphtheria,
tetanus and anthrax."
Ashley Hotz
***************************************
A soldier's tale: military misdiagnosis He was a decorated Green Beret,
but when his performance faltered, the Army gave him the boot - not
medical treatment for his deadly disease Dallas Morning News, Monday,
October 27, 2003
By NANCY BARR CANSON /
Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning News
KARNACK, Texas -
Staff Sgt. James Alford can't talk. He doesn't recognize his wife. His
head shakes, his hands tremble.
He is agitated, restless, diapered and helpless, requiring round-the-clock
care from his family. Unable to coordinate his fingers and hands, the
former marathon runner can still walk, with assistance, and his daily
ritual is to unsteadily "walk the floor," as his wife, Army Spec. Amber
Alford, describes it.
In April, the Green Beret and Bronze Star recipient was sent home from
Iraq by the Army. But it wasn't because he badly needed medical care.
"They sent him home to be court-martialed," said his mother, Gail Alford,
a former Army nurse. "They wanted to strip him of his Special Forces tab.
They wanted him out of the Army."
Army officials say they did not realize the 24-year-old soldier's
increasingly erratic behavior was an early symptom of the
difficult-to-diagnose Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. CJD is a fatal,
degenerative brain disorder that attacks the human brain in the same way
that "mad cow" disease attacks cattle.
Staff Sgt. Alford was disciplined and demoted. Although the Army has
restored his rank and corrected what it admits was a mistake, the Alfords
- a family in which many members have served in the armed forces -
question how this could have happened.
"I don't blame the Army for this disease," said his father, retired Army
Command Sgt. Maj. John Alford, who was in the service 34 years. "I blame
them for how they treated my son. They treated him like yesterday's
garbage. They reduced his rank. They called him an idiot, called him
stupid - this is a wounded soldier. It's no different than if he had taken
a bullet to the brain."
The family has asked for and received acknowledgement that commanders in
the 5th Special Forces Group erred.
"It's a terrible thing that happened," said Maj. Robert E. Gowan, public
affairs officer for the Special Forces. "Everyone is deeply sorry for
Sergeant Alford and his family. I think personal apologies, apologies that
really mean something, will happen in time."
During his first six years in the Army, Staff Sgt. Alford was ranked an
"excellent" soldier in every evaluation. He was awarded two Army
Commendation medals, five Army Achievement medals, an Army Good Conduct
Medal, numerous division ribbons and, in May 2002, the Bronze Star for
"peerless expertise" in Afghanistan.
Changing behavior
But four months later, changes in his behavior were noted. He went from
being lauded for his "exceptionally meritorious service," "gallant
conduct" and "incisive competence" to being called an irresponsible
failure. In September 2002, he was disciplined for losing his assault vest
and other military items. He was AWOL for several days from his post in
Fort Campbell, Ky., and later demoted from staff sergeant to sergeant.
"In retrospect, when he got back from Afghanistan, there were signs," his
mother said. "But we thought it was combat stress. We didn't know what it
was."
No one knew that the changes in Staff Sgt. Alford's personality -
forgetfulness and impaired judgment - were early symptoms of CJD.
Staff Sgt. Alford's wife, who was working with Army intelligence before
her husband's illness, was training in California during this period, and
his parents saw him only briefly at Christmas before he was deployed to
Kuwait in January.
In Kuwait, as his condition worsened, his conduct became more erratic. He
received a written order to carry a note pad "to write instructions down
to ensure they are not forgotten." His records show he was placed on
probation, accused of "dereliction of duty" and "larceny," of losing his
protective mask, stealing another soldier's mask, failing to report for
duty four times and lying to superiors.
His commander wrote on April 10 that he would initiate action to revoke
Staff Sgt. Alford's Special Forces designation.
Critical comments
"Your conduct is inconsistent with the integrity and professionalism
required by a Special Forces soldier," wrote Lt. Col. Christopher E.
Conner of the 2nd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group Headquarters in
Kuwait. "I do not believe you are suitable for further Special Forces
duty." The Alfords were later told that Staff Sgt. Alford had been seen by
a doctor in Kuwait, who reportedly said nothing was wrong with him. A
psychiatrist in Kuwait reportedly said that he was "faking it."
"Jamie was a good soldier," said his mother, who has left her job to care
for her son. "When all this started happening, anyone should have known he
was sick."
The cause of Staff Sgt. Alford's disease, diagnosed as "sporadic" CJD, is
unknown.
CJD is a fatal degenerative brain disease in which early symptoms of
behavioral changes and memory loss lead to severe mental impairment,
dementia, loss of coordination, involuntary jerking movements, loss of
speech, loss of vision, coma and death. Sporadic CJD is said to occur
spontaneously, while new variant CJD is caused by eating beef contaminated
with mad cow disease.
Sporadic CJD usually affects elderly patients, who often die within six
months of the onset of symptoms. The duration of new variant CJD symptoms
is often 18 months or more, and the median age of death is 28.
Staff Sgt. Alford showed clinical symptoms of new variant CJD, but his
brain pathology was consistent with sporadic CJD. The Alfords suspect he
might have contracted the disease by eating contaminated beef somewhere.
During the past six years, he was deployed to Iraq, Kuwait, Jordan, Oman,
Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, Thailand, France and England.
But they also see another possibility.
Staff Sgt. Alford told his doctors and his family that he ate sheep's
brain when serving in Oman two years ago.
"As a Green Beret, he lived among the people," said his wife, Spec.
Alford. "He said the locals served him the head of a sheep. It was
considered an honor."
But while experts say cattle in Great Britain contracted mad cow disease
from eating scrapie-infected sheep parts, they don't believe the disease
is transmissible from sheep to people - no human has been proved to have
contracted "mad sheep disease."
It's also theoretically possible that the soldier was given a contaminated
vaccine.
In 2001, certain vaccine manufacturers admitted that they were using fetal
calf serum and other materials from cattle raised in countries at high
risk for mad cow disease, in spite of years of warnings from the Food and
Drug Administration. The vaccines include those to prevent polio,
diphtheria, tetanus and anthrax.
"Jamie was given all those," his father said.
No one has been known to have contracted the disease from a contaminated
vaccine, and the FDA puts the odds of a vaccine being tainted with mad cow
disease at 1 in 40 million doses.
But the odds of Staff Sgt. Alford getting CJD "spontaneously" are one in
100 million, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
His family realizes that the cause of his disease is likely to remain a
mystery.
Now, in the final months of his illness, Jamie is fed intravenously and
sedated to help him sleep. He stares blankly and doesn't recognize his
family. His wife, brother, parents and grandparents help him in his
walking ritual.
"We walk the floor," his wife said. "I hold onto him so he won't fall
down. We just walk across the living room and back and forth. He'll do
that for hours and hours. It's like he can't be still."
The family knows it is only a matter of days or weeks before he may go
blind and lapse into a coma.
He is expected to die before Christmas.
Soldier sent home
On April 22, Staff Sgt. Alford was sent home to Big Rock, Tenn., near his
Army post at Fort Campbell. "His hands were shaking," said his neighbor
Justin Hawkins, 23. "He couldn't turn his keys. He wasn't able to talk
right. Something was really wrong with him, but we didn't know what. He
just seemed really shook up
and frightened."
The utilities were disconnected. Mr. Hawkins said he unlocked the house
and called the power company. His mother, Beverly Hawkins, contacted the
Alfords in Texas on April 26.
Neither they nor their daughter-in-law had had any communication with
Staff Sgt. Alford for months.
"I had a 24-year-old son I thought was fighting a war in Iraq, and I find
out from his neighbor that he's sick in Tennessee," Mrs. Alford said.
The Alfords drove about 600 miles to see their son that night.
"He had lost 30 pounds," his mother said. "He looked like a skeleton...He
couldn't drink from a glass. He couldn't hold a pen or eat with a fork. He
couldn't button a shirt, couldn't drive, couldn't say his wife's name-how
could anyone not have known he was sick?"
The Alfords took their son to the hospital emergency room, then to an Army
medical clinic. From the Blanchfield Army Hospital, he was sent to the
veteran's hospital in Nashville, where Dr. Steve J. Williams, clinical
fellow in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Vanderbilt University
Medical Center, eventually diagnosed CJD.
"I was very struck by Jamie's symptoms," Dr. Williams said. "I had never
seen a patient like Jamie before."
Dr. Williams said Jamie's superiors might not have realized he was ill
because Jamie tried so hard to hide his symptoms.
"Jamie was very smart," Dr. Williams said. "He was tremendously
resourceful. He tried to hide his disease as long as he could. He tried to
compensate. When I asked him his birth date, he glanced at his nametag. He
wanted so much to get it right."
A brain biopsy was performed May 29, and the sporadic CJD diagnosis was
confirmed at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology two weeks later. The
National Prion Disease Surveillance Center also examined the brain tissue,
to confirm it was not a case of new variant CJD.
In May, Staff Sgt. Alford was still able to recall and describe, in broken
sentences, how he was treated by his superiors in Kuwait.
"They called him stupid, called him lazy," his father said. "It made him
so angry and there was nothing he could do."
Mr. Alford's other son, Billy, is in the National Guard. Both of Jamie
Alford's grandfathers and two great-uncles fought in World War II. Mr.
Alford says he still loves the military.
"But we need to remove cruel commanders," he said.
Doctors who treated Staff Sgt. Alford wrote letters supporting the
family's efforts to correct his record and restore his rank.
The Alfords filed paperwork to challenge the demotion. And they asked for
apologies from 12 individuals in the 5th Special Forces Group who they say
were "involved in the persecution both verbally and physically" of their
son.
U.S. Rep. Max Sandlin, D-Marshall, intervened on the Alfords' behalf and
received a reply from the Army on July 30.
'Deepest concerns'
"The 5th SFG(A) would like to express its deepest concerns to Sergeant
Alford and his family," wrote Lt. Col. Johan C. Haraldsen from the Office
of Special Inquiries at Fort Campbell. "His disease was not known prior to
or during his [Uniform Code of Military Justice] proceedings. All actions
taken by the 5th SFG(A) involving Sergeant Alford were appropriate based
on the best information available at that time." The Alfords received no
reply to their application to correct Staff Sgt. Alford's record, and so
they sought help from the Army Review Boards Agency. That request was
denied in August in a letter stating the Alfords had not exhausted other
remedies.
Spec. Alford, said her husband's Green Beret teammates had been helpful
and supportive during this ordeal.
"His team has been fantastic," she said. "They call when they can and ask
how he's doing. They helped me move all our stuff out of our house in
Tennessee.
"That was hard," she said. "That's when it hit me that he'd never be
coming back."
Mr. Sandlin's office and The Dallas Morning News made further inquiries,
and the Alfords were informed Sept. 24 that the Army had reinstated Staff
Sgt. Alford's rank.
"The Army tries to take care of its people as best it can," said Maj.
Gowan of the Special Forces. "Getting things done like this often takes a
long time. They're trying to do the right thing and act with compassion in
light of Sergeant Alford's misfortune."
Surrounded by his family, Staff Sgt. Alford was in the hospital with a
kidney infection when his father received the news in a phone call from
the major who is second in command of the battalion.
"He's a good man," Mr. Alford said. "He asked about Jamie. He assured us
that everything had been corrected. ... It took too long. But we're glad
it's finally done."
Staff Sgt. Alford is unable to comprehend that he's been vindicated.
But his father confessed that he told a white lie to his son three months
ago, when Jamie was still able to understand.
"I told him they'd already corrected it," Mr. Alford said. "I wanted him
to know that. If I had waited 'til now it would have been too late."
Nancy Barr Canson is a Marshall-based freelance writer.
1999
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