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Bronx Beat Online
November 6, 1995
Sickle-Cell Patients Seek Respect
While many facilities disdain these "repeaters," one Bronx center is a
safe haven.
by Loch Adamson
One night several years ago, Ivor Pannell went to the emergency
room at Montefiore Hospital. He was suffering from an acute pain
crisis, a common but potentially dangerous symptom of sickle-cell
anemia. After being admitted, he lay in a hospital bed in agony,
waiting for a nurse to bring him medication--a powerful narcotic
prescribed by his doctor. The nurse arrived with the initial dose,
but did not return at the time he was scheduled to receive another.
When the nurse finally reappeared, Pannell asked her why she
was deliberately delaying his treatment. He recalls her having said,
"I'm going to continue to bring your medication late, and I'm
going to do it on purpose because I know that you do not require
this medication. You should just get out of that bed right now
because you're not sick, you're just faking it. You just want this
drug like all the rest of them."
Recounting the incident, Pannell shook his head, as if trying to
free himself from the memory of her voice. "I hear myself saying
it, and it's like, "Damn, that couldn't have really happened," he
said. "But I remember lying in that bed, and I remember hearing
her."
His experience is not uncommon. Many individuals with
sickle-cell disease tell stories of indifferent cruelty suffered under
the care of emergency room and hospital staffs. Like patients with
other chronic diseases, such as asthma and hemophilia, people
with sickle-cell disease frequently require emergency care. The
medical treatment of sickle-cell disease--including sickle-cell
anemia--differs from other diseases, however, because it involves
powerful narcotics, painkillers that can result in physical
dependency. Because of the frequency of patients' crises and
problems with physical dependency, hospital staff members have
been known to stereotype individuals with sickle-cell disease.
They are seen as difficult patients, or worse, as drug addicts,
hooked on the painkillers prescribed for them.
"Of course there is prejudice in emergency rooms," said Dr.
Ronald Nagel, professor of medicine and head of the division of
hematology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx.
"Individuals with sickle-cell anemia often have acute pain crises,
many times in their lives, and sometimes many times in one year.
And when they go to the emergency room and appear more than
twice, they're not very welcome. They become known as
repeaters, so they get really bad medical care. They're left to the
last."
Dr. Lennette Benjamin, associate professor of medicine at Albert
Einstein, attributes some of the behavior of emergency room staff
to misplaced frustration--frustration taken out on patients who
keep coming back. "You know, this is perceived as a kind of
failure," she said. "We're taught that when patients come in, you
make an assessment, you make a diagnosis, and you treat them,
and you get results. Sickle-cell anemia doesn't always follow that
course."
"Hemophiliacs can be just as difficult as patients with sickle-cell
disease," added Nagel, "but somehow, the reaction to sickle-cell
anemia is different in this city. There is a racial undertone to it
here." A significant percentage of individuals with sickle-cell
disease are African-American, and the racial attitudes of health
care providers sometimes influence the care those patients receive
in emergency rooms.
As part of an effort to improve patients' clinical care, Benjamin
and Nagel established the Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center at
Montefiore Hospital in 1988; the center's day hospital opened in
1989. The center is only one of 10 such sites created in the
United States by the funding from the National Institutes of
Health (NIH). Although Benjamin deals with patients' crises on a
daily basis as the on-site director of clinical services, both she and
Nagel administer the center's NIH grant. Since it opened, the
Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center has become known as a refuge
for compassionate care among people with sickle-cell disease in
the Bronx.
As much as race complicates typical emergency room responses
to patients with sickle-cell disease, it also complicates any
discussion of sickle-cell anemia itself. The myth that sickle-cell
anemia is a "black disease" persists in the public mind. Although it
originated in sub-Saharan Africa and still affects a disproportionate
number of blacks, it has since traveled across many continents
and ethnicities. "In hematology, we call it 'gene flow,'" said Nagel.
Mutations of sickle-cell disease can be found in populations in
Sicily, Greece, Catalonia, Spain, and Northern Africa, he
explained, and yet another variation exists in India and Saudi
Arabia.
In the United States, approximately 2 million people carry at least
one sickle-cell gene; it is estimated that some 65,000 have
sickle-cell anemia. "In New York City, you can be of Italian
descent and have sickle-cell anemia, although it is infrequent,"
said Nagel."Most of our patients are of African-American
descent, but many are also Caribbean. In effect, sickle-cell anemia
is--how do you say it?--an equal-opportunity employer."
Sickle-cell anemia, named for the crescent shape of affected red
blood cells, results from the inheritance of two recessive genes
that determine hemoglobin production. In individuals with
sickle-cell anemia, abnormal hemoglobin causes red blood cells to
torque, or sickle. Although sickle-cell anemia is only one of a
group of disorders characterized by abnormal hemoglobin
production, it is the most common.
In some instances, people inherit only one sickle gene along with
one normal gene; medical literature describes them simply as
carriers of the sickle-cell trait. Such individuals' red blood cells
function fairly normally, although they do contain a mixture of
normal and abnormal hemoglobin types.
For people with sickle-cell anemia, the disease manifests itself in a
variety of ways. The most common symptom is known as an
acute pain crisis, or painful episode, when the sickled red blood
cells clump in small blood vessels and prevent the flow of
oxygenated blood from reaching body tissues. "The best way to
describe it is like the worst toothache you can imagine," said
Vielka White, curled on a vinyl couch in the waiting area of the
Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center. In the midst of her own crisis,
she spoke slowly, just above a whisper, "Now take that pain and
put it in your back, your legs, your chest. It's constant."
The symptoms can appear anywhere in the body, and endanger
virtually all organs. Pain becomes a harbinger of potential
catastrophe; tissues die from lack of oxygen. Patients sometimes
suffer strokes, but the most deadly manifestation of sickle-cell
disease in adults is "acute chest syndrome," in which blood vessels
in the lungs become clogged, dramatically increasing the danger of
infection. Congestive heart failure can result.
In the most extreme pain crises, patients require regular blood
transfusions. The most common way to treat uncomplicated
crises, however, is with narcotics--such as Demerol, Dilaudid, and
Percocet--in combination with intravenous fluids. The use of
narcotic analgesics has proven a mixed blessing for patients. One
of the most effective means for relieving their pain has also
stigmatized them in the eyes of their health-care providers. Even
medical journals openly acknowledge the problem. "Individuals
with sickle-cell disease (SCD) enter the health care delivery
system via the emergency room during pain episodes, and
routinely experience long delays, extensive blood tests,
accusations of drug-seeking behavior, staff ignorance regarding
SCD and analgesics, and undertreatment of their pain," wrote
Brian Shelly, Dr. Kathryn Kramer, and Dr. Kermit Nash in an
article which appeared in the Journal of Health and Social
Policy. "The fear of addiction persists among providers despite
facts that addiction resulting solely from hospital medication is
rare, and that SCD patients are deeply concerned over the
side-effects of analgesics."
The subjectivity of pain also plays a role in its treatment.
"Unfortunately, there is no objective method--at the bedside or in
the laboratory--to confirm the existence of acute sickle
vaso-occlusive pain," wrote Dr. Charles Pollack in an article for
medical journal Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America.
"Meanwhile, there have been studies that demonstrate that
sicklers display no more of a propensity for narcotic dependence
and drug seeking than any other patient with chronic pain."
The prejudice remains, however, perhaps because narcotic
painkillers can, and still do result in physical dependency. "There
are many of us who have problems with these narcotics, and we
need to confront that truth,"said Pannell, a former dancer, who,
along with his wife, Deborah, recently founded a patient advocacy
organization called S.C.A.R.E., or Sickle-Cell Advocates for
Research and Empowerment. They suggest that many medical
providers need to make a crucial distinction between physical
dependency and addiction, a distinction that would begin to
destigmatize accidental dependency.
Benjamin emphasizes that in addition to conflating dependency
and addiction, many emergency room personnel fail to understand
how they contribute to the problem. "Sometimes people are
coming in [to emergency rooms] because they're physically
dependent," she said. "But many times they're physically
dependent because of how they've been managed. A lot of people
who are on opioids--narcotic analgesics--don't need to be on
them. But the treatment is not to penalize the person. The
treatment is to try and get the person in, taper them [off the
medication], prevent withdrawal; support them, and get them over
it."
"Remember," Pannell said, "at the beginning of any physical
dependency is a legitimate medical need for the drug and a doctor
who legally prescribes it."Pannell himself articulates the
difference between physical dependency and addiction as the
difference between physiological need and psycho-compulsive
behavior. "Of course, there are aspects of both in the other," he
added. "There is a physical component to addiction, just as there
are psychological components to physical dependency. But those
psychological components are not the same. With physical
dependency, those components are things like fear, anxiety,
frustration and despair."
Pannell speaks from first-hand experience. In his early 20s, his
health began to change, and he experienced several life-or-death
crises just at the time he was transitioning from pediatric to adult
care. "All of sudden," said Pannell, "I was being treated with
much more protent narcotics, and I didn't have one doctor at the
time who was in charge of all of my care. I was constantly coming
under the care of different doctors who were all very young, and
didn't really understand a whole lot about sickle-cell. This was the
period of my life that was ripe for some kind of dependency
problem." Pannell didn't even know at the time that he had
developed a dependency problem, or that the narcotic analgesics
being used to treat his pain were further complicating his
symptoms.
Pannell credits Benjamin with saving his life by helping him break
free of his dependency on analgesics. Benjamin slowly tapered
Pannell's medication, helping him avoid both pain crises and
withdrawal symptoms. "What was supposed to take five days
took five and a half weeks,"vsaid Pannell.
During those weeks, Pannell not only recovered from his physical
dependency; he also decided to survive. "You have to
understand," Pannell said."Before I started to work with Dr.
Benjamin, I was counting on dying; I saw my demise as being in
my early to mid-30s. And I was relieved of any responsibility for
my health, or my disease, because it was clear to me that in a few
years it wouldn't make any difference. That's the kind of twisted
logic I was using."
Unfortunately, such a grim prognosis still has a factual basis. Until
recently, many people with sickle-cell anemia--if they survived
infancy--could only expect to live into their 20s or 30s. "Acute
chest syndrome is the number one killer," said Nagel, "but
mortality is now a moving target, because medical care has
improved people's lifespans considerably."
Nagel and Benjamin hope to obtain additional funding to keep the
day hospital at the Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center open around
the clock, because there are many people in the Bronx and
beyond who need responsive, consistent medical attention. The
center currently serves between 300 and 400 people, although
Nagel estimates that there are approximately 1,400 individuals
with sickle-cell disease in the borough.
In the center's lobby, White said, "When you walk in here, you
don't get judged. This place feels like a kind of home." White,
who a member of S.C.A.R.E., talked about the way in which she
has learned to manage the psychological aspects of sickle-cell
anemia, as well as the pain. "One of my definite beliefs is that I
have the disease, the disease doesn't have me," she said. "I'm in
control--if I let the disease take control, I'd just be in pain all the
time."
Pannell hopes to correct some of the harmful miconceptions about
individuals with sickle cell disease, and encourage people who
have the disease to take control of their lives and their treatment.
Above all, he refuses to be defined by his illness, or by the
stereotypes that surround it. "We refer to ourselves," he said, "as
sickle-cell defiers."
Copyright © 1995 Bronx Beat Online
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