Tuesday, June 26, 2012

My Spinal Surgery: Health Care in Asia

 

At the tail end of my six months of misadventures in India, I lived in Goa for seven weeks. Turning a blind eye to the packs of wild dogs which would attack the lone late night wanderer on the beach and reduce him to a pile of bones, the hordes of hustlers who were always trying to sell overpriced and mostly worthless souvenirs or clean non-existent earwax from my ears, the pot-bellied police who were constantly looking for whatever bribe they could extract from the tourists, and the generally dour and completely mercenary locals who actually populated the place, I have to say I had a truly wonderful time.

To keep fit, I swam over a kilometer every day, making my way through the herds of cows who were nice enough to let me share the seashore with them. I learned the art of stepping over and around copious amounts of cow poop, a skill which here in ultra-sanitary Japan is unfortunately atrophying.

Toward the end of the seven weeks, I noticed a knot in my back between the middle part of my spine and my shoulder blade. I assumed it was just tension, the result of having to go through major negotiations every time I wanted to buy something.

I returned to Japan. This was February 2010.

The "knot" kept getting worse. By late March I was experiencing numbness and increasingly severe pain in my left arm. I became convinced that I had some sort of growth, perhaps a tumor, that was pressing on a nerve. I sought medical attention here in the rural part of Japan where I live. After X-rays and an MRI, one local physician told me I was just falling apart and he doubted anything could be done. Surgery was an option but it was very risky.

Those of you who know me have rarely heard me say anything negative about Japan, even with the tons of radioactive pollutants now pouring into the seas as a result of the horrible mess in Fukushima.  I will say, however, that this doctor's advice was less than helpful and certainly very discouraging. Plus it turned out very wrong.

On the plus side of the Japan equation, I did get substantial aid in my distressed state from a sports doctor here (who shot electricity through my aching arm) and a chiropractic clinic who used massage and a neck stretching and alignment device to try to relieve my agony. By now, believe me, I was in severe agony.

Unfortunately, none of this was helping. But let me just point out something amazing.

Japan has universal health care, meaning there is in place national health insurance. The individual pays a very modest co-pay, the system picks up the tab. Both the sports doctor and the chiropractic clinic, knowing full well I did not have national health insurance, only charged me the co-pay and let the rest of the fee slide. Think about that for just a minute.

Back to the drama.

Nothing was working. By the end of April, my condition was catastrophic. I literally could not be vertical for more than ten minutes. Something was pressing on a nerve in my back. Being vertical increased that pressure. The pain was excruciating. Now it wasn't just my arm that was numb, it was spreading down my left leg. I had trouble walking.

To make matters worse, I was coming up on the end of the 90 days on my visitors visa. That meant I had to leave Japan, then come back in to get a fresh stamp on my passport. This was not good. But I did what I had to do and booked a flight to Seoul. Flights to South Korea are frequent and inexpensive.

I should have had a great time in Seoul. For three days I stayed in a guest house next to a beautiful university, Hongik University which is famous for its Colleges of Design and Fine Arts. The area is a typical "college town" with fantastic restaurants, night clubs, shopping.

But I spent my time there on my back in bed, trying not to moan and disrupt the others in my dorm room.

 

Then I got the call. It was my best friend, lover, companion Masumi Nishida. She had been looking around on the internet to try to find some way to address my disintegration into a worthless cripple and discovered that a world-renowned spine specialist was on staff at a premier facility right there in Seoul called the Wooridul Spine Center. The facility was a huge, fully-staffed  state-of-the-art hospital next to Gimpo Airport, promoting what it called medical tourism. Medical tourism is a recent form of enterprise, encouraging people from around the world to visit and take full advantage of health services.

I wrote them an email, expecting to hear back from them sometime later in the decade.

I got an immediate response! They set up an appointment for me the next day.

It gets better. And I'm not making any of this up . . .

I reported early the next morning __ that itself was a harrowing, painful experience even if the subways in Seoul are among the best in the world __ and spent five hours as follows:

First I met with Dr. Zhang's foreign visitor assistant, a personable and competent young man named Charlie Shim. Then I met with Dr. Zhang himself. That was followed by an X-ray, CATSCAN, and an MRI. I met with Dr. Zhang again to go over the results. He was 90% sure he had identified the problem. Severe compression between the 7th and 8th vertebrae. They would perform a procedure which would confirm his suspicions and possibly temporarily relieve my symptoms.

I was dressed in a highly flattering hospital gown, then put in a surgical CATSCAN, one that allowed real time monitoring of the area of my spine they would be working on. The work consisted __ brace yourself __ inserting a 12" needle at the base of my throat and threading it through all of the nerves, muscles, bones and miscelleous sinew along the way, all the way down to the middle of my spine, and injecting a combination of cortisone and a local anesthetic between the targeted vertebrae.

Immediately after the injection had taken place and they removed that incredibly ominous looking needle, the pain on the left side of my body was gone. I practically jumped up and started dancing.

But they cautioned me. I had to wait 15 minutes. If the pinching on the nerve was too severe, when the anesthetic wore off the pain would return. Unfortunately it did.

Now came my final meeting with Dr. Zhang. He explained where things stood.

Though I was still writhing in unbelievable pain, we had accomplished a lot. As the good doctor pointed out, we now knew exactly where the problem lay. A nerve which served the sensory apparatus in my left arm and had connections down the left side of my body was experiencing 100% compression as a result of the collapse of necessary padding between the two suspect vertebrae. The good news was that this could be corrected by surgery.

My five hours at the Wooridul Spine Center finally came to a close with my paying the bill. Total amount = $562.

Wait! Can this be right? Three meetings and an examination by a world-class and highly renowned spinal surgeon, an X-ray, an MRI, two CATSCANS, and a major procedure involving a needle the length of a car antenna and it came to $562?

Yes, folks. It's true.
Since you're already getting the gist of this posting, I'll make the rest of it as short and sweet as I can, my tendency for being an incurable motor-mouth notwithstanding.

I returned three weeks later for surgery with Dr. Zhang. Charlie Shim had summarized all that was involved. Five days in the hospital. Pre-care. Post-care. Anesthesia, medications, surgery, food, my semi-private room with two other patients. Total estimated at $14,800.

As part of the "pre-care", I was given every test, scan, monitoring known to modern man. Frankly, the facilities at Wooridul are probably as technologically advanced as any in the world. I am despite my advanced years a very healthy guy. With one small noted exception (one heart valve functioning at 68% efficiency), I passed with flying colors, a physiological wonder and testimony to the merits of the regimen of exercise and good diet over most of my life.

After 2 1/2 hours of surgery, they wheeled me back into my room. I emerged from the fog and euphoria of a general anesthetic __ very nice stuff! __ and saw that there were about ten people staring at me. Nurses, assistants, Charlie Shim and Dr. Zhang himself.

"How do you feel, Mr. Rachel?"

How did I feel? Besides groggy?

I felt great!

I started to sit up. They told me just to rest.

Dr. Zhang then told me that my operation went perfectly. He was 100% sure it was a complete success, and if I felt like sitting upright that would be fine.

A nurse helped me up. Not only did I sit up but I stood up. Then I did a little dance. Everyone seemed to think I was crazy but I got a small round of applause.

I spent the next day recovering. During that time I made a promotional video__ I think it is still posted on the Wooridul website __ telling my story and effusively commending everyone involved. I also helped correct some of the English for the promotional material on the facility, working along side Charlie, who was responsible for such things.

Since I was doing so well, I checked out two days early. They fitted me with a neck brace. My last official act there was paying my bill.

Total charges for all of the above: $10,450.

But...but...but...they said it would be $14,800 in their estimate.

Well, I didn't stay the entire five days, only three. But the simple truth was, as Charlie explained to me on my way out the door, they really appreciated my help with correcting their English and doing the promotional video, so they were just returning the favor. They effectively knocked over $2000 off my bill.

Just returning the favor.

Okay. I know I am a novelist. So you are all thinking, "This John Rachel really expects us to buy another one of his wacko fantasies. He's still in satire mode from writing "11-11-11" and "12-12-12". You've seen his promo videos. The guy's nuts!"

True as all that might be, in this rare instance I'm merely reporting the facts. This is what happened and how it happened.

Since my surgery __ that was two years ago __ yes, I can feel "something" in my back. Certainly no pain. But maybe a little tweak. I mean, they spent 2 1/2 hours threading all sorts of exotic robotic instruments down the length of my spine, grinding and chipping away at bone, inserting some sort of supportive splint. You'd expect to feel something.

But I ride my bike every day. I have worked out at four different gyms (three in Vietnam, one in Taiwan), lifting weights and doing heavy cardio-vascular work. I still do a rigorous floor routine to keep from turning into a pile of jelly while I spew out more nonsensical books and annoying political rants.

I'm not going to preach or spoon feed anyone on this. Look at health care in America and draw your own conclusions.

I will add this in closing . . .

People have said to me, "Did you ever consider getting your surgery in the U.S.? America has great doctors and surgeons too."

Right. This would have cost minimum $50,000-60,000 there. Then there's the risk that some underpaid nurse or administrative assistant would make the wrong entry on my chart and I'd end up with my leg amputated or with double-D breast implants.

Consider getting surgery in the U.S.?

Give me a break!


[ This originated at the author's personal website . . . http://jdrachel.com ]

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Books

Books

I updated the Books page on my personal website to reflect my latest work!

Thursday, June 7, 2012

12-12-12






IS THIS HOW IT ALL ENDS?

Welcome to the parallel universe of "12-12-12".

This not what actually happens during 2012. But what unfolds is not more implausible. Nor is it less implausible. It's reality with healthy doses of hyper-reality and comedy, spawned by the tragic absurdity of our times.  "12-12-12"   is dark, ironic, witty, at times surrealistic, sometimes just plain weird. One reviewer calls it "laugh-out-loud brain food for hungry minds."

"12-12-12" is now available in print and in every popular ebook format:

As an iBook from Apple . . . http://lnk.ms/bdlyY
As a paperback from Amazon . . . http://lnk.ms/c5wzz
As a paperback from the printer . . . http://lnk.ms/bWjKX
As a paperback from Barnes & Noble . . . http://lnk.ms/c5Dc9
As a Kindle ebook from Amazon (US) . . . http://lnk.ms/bMMYC
As a Kindle ebook from Amazon (UK) . . . http://lnk.ms/bMMbq
As a Nook Book from Barnes & Noble . . . http://lnk.ms/bxQWM
Every popular ebook format at Smashwords . . . http://lnk.ms/bWj82
As an EPUB ebook from Kobo . . . http://lnk.ms/c1CWm
Direct from my publisher . . . http://lnk.ms/bMMln

Short synopsis:

2012 was the year America played a game of chicken with destiny itself. Everyone like it or not was on board for the ride. The pedal was to the metal. People hung on for dear life and hoped for the best.

Everyone wanted to believe that those behind the wheel knew what they were doing. But even the most foolhardy gamblers weren’t making bets. They knew a single unwavering truth.

Destiny never blinks.

Twenty-three year old Noah Tass, like most ordinary Americans, was trying in the midst of all of the chaos, corruption and incompetence, to just live life — have his little piece of the pie and a few laughs along the way.

He thought he had conquered the main obstacle to his happiness by escaping his home town in the hayseed heartland of America, the little blackhead on the face of America where he had grown up and spent most of his life.

Little did he know that taking this simple step would send him tumbling into the vortex of events unfolding in an America that was broken and sure to make things worse by trying to fix itself.

Destiny never blinks.

But it does occasionally cut loose with a thunderous belly laugh.

............................................................................................................................................

Predictably, the reviewers are out of their cages and at it. Here is a random sampling.
"12-12-12 builds the case that America is in decline. It is more a work that stands as proof that the American literary arts are in decline." –  London-Manchester Raconteur
"11-11-11 was evidence enough that the author was unhinged. 12-12-12 is proof that the writings of John Rachel are dangerous. Enough is enough!" –  St. Louis Literary Review
"It is hard to make a valid case in a free society for censorship. Having said that, this book should be banned and the author subjected to a lifetime of solitary confinement in a nation where torture is common practice." –  New England Journal of Aesthetics
"Why would the CIA allow this sort of vile, slanderous rubbish to continue to be available in America? It seems worth the price of a Predator Drone to keep John Rachel from subjecting us to any more of his insulting and subversive work masquerading as literary fiction." –  L.A. Contemporary Magazine of the Arts
"This what you get when psychosis is mistaken for creativity." –  Chicago Journal of Arts and Science
"The author lives overseas. That's because if he ever steps foot in America again, he'll be drawn, quartered and left for the flies to finish off on the Nat'l Mall." –  Miami Sentinel Post
"Kids of America: There's a lesson in 12-12-12. This is your brain on meth, marijuana, glue and Godless television." –  Tennessee Televangelist Report
Those are the good reviews!

What can I say?

All I can suggest is to do the right thing. Don't let people who know what they're talking about discourage you from diving into this novel like you would a hot tub filled with your best friends and your favorite champagne. Strap on that snorkel, your goggles, and take the plunge.

Maybe you need a little more encouragement? Like those folks at Jamestown who were thirsty as hell but had this nagging feeling something was up with the lemonade?

Several promotional videos for the novel are in preparation. While we're waiting for them, below is a link to the video that was developed by a self-proclaimed Madison Avenue marketing genius who works for a prestigious and allegedly reputable advertising firm in the Big Apple. It goes without saying we put a stop payment on the check.

You can watch this on YouTube here.

Finally, for you obdurate and incorrigible skeptics who aren't yet overwhelmed by the obvious importance of "12-12-12" in the history of Western literary and intellectual pursuits, here is an excerpt culled from early in the book.


CHAPTER THREE 

January 16 . . . MLK For Dummies 

 

The politicians put on their game faces but they could feel it — the vibrations, the subsonic murmuring, the barely audible low resonant rumble that seemed to emanate from everywhere. 

 

The rumbling from all the grumbling. 

 

There was no escaping it. 

 

Everything was broken. 

 

Nothing was getting fixed. 

 

Everyone was pissed.

 

The traditional end-of-the-year cluster of holidays provided a slight reprieve. Thanksgiving, Christmas, Hanukkah, New Years. But frustration built quickly following the hollow cheers and generally anemic celebrations. Santa wasn’t very good to people this year. Unemployment actually went up in December when normally seasonal hiring gave a boost to the labor statistics. The lines at soup kitchens were getting longer and the soup looking more like dishwater each passing day. The entire population was on a hair-trigger.

Monday January 16th was a national holiday. Martin Luther King Day.

As unfathomable as it seemed, there were still people who didn’t know who Martin Luther King was. A truck driver interviewed in Arkansas by a CNN reporter replied, “Oh yeah, him. The fight guy who used to manage Mike Tyson. The guy with with the tall hair.” That was Don King, dimwad.

Others had heard of him but weren’t quite sure what his place was in history or why there was a holiday. A coed at Bob Jones University wrote an article for the school paper titled, “Why Martin Luther King Started the Luthern Church.” Ah! Martin Luther King was a 16th Century German monk. So America gave him his own national holiday. Got it.

Ignorance wasn’t bliss, however. Some strange and disturbing things happened this particular MLK holiday and the week that followed, which hinted at the vast cauldron of turbulence coming to a boil in the deep subconscious of the country.

The weekend before the official holiday, the American Dairy Association launched a massive advertising blitz, along the lines of hundreds of similar ones it had been running for several years. 

This one was called ‘Got MLK?’ It featured the most famous portrait photo of the great civil rights leader Photoshopped with a white mustache of fresh milk on Dr. King’s upper lip. This remarkable work of advertising genius — a public relations faux pas of cosmic proportions guaranteed to end the careers of the pitbull ad team that created it — was everywhere. Billboards, internet ads, television spots, magazines and newspapers.

The right wing went nuts. It was bad enough having Beyonce or Shaquille O’Neal staring back at you in these obnoxious ads with the milk mustache, but to have to look at a proven commie, pinko turncoat like that Martin Luther King SOB, a rabble-rousing enemy of good patriotic Americans, having those big lips grin that know-it-all shit-eating grin while making it look like he’d be drinking anything other than cheap wine or sterno, was an outrage. Everybody knew all these negro types were lactose intolerant anyway. What a pile of lefty propaganda! What a total pile of shit!

Fox News led the harangue practically non-stop, then of course the other media outlets not to be left out followed suit. Soon the fever pitch of hysterical commentary boiled like a crock pot which had been welded to a stove which couldn’t be turned off. A never-ending stream of self-righteous acrimony and disdainful disbelief bubbled over and spewed out of suit-and-tie talking heads and bouffanted bubble brains. Got MLK? was a total field day for the freaks of the far right.

The left wing also went nuts. A non-stop harangue condemning the virulent racism and umbridled bigotry of the right, thundered away on MSNBC and raged on over hundreds of progressive internet web sites, in a media counteroffensive, which took left wing whining and opining to new heights of pre-menstrual hysteria. Latte-sipping liberals quietly indignant that the image of such a great man had been so crudely desecrated and that commercial exploitation had stooped to such crass levels could barely be heard. They pouted and bought a nice bottle 1989 Portofino to anesthetize their bleeding hearts.

But it was the African-American community, especially those living in urban ghettos which had been the main beneficiary of just about everything that was going wrong in America, the beaten down who could only look forward to being beaten even more while they were down, who took the protests over the tasteless and offensive misappropriation of a great black man, to a whole new level.

From New Orleans to New York, Houston to Detroit, Philadelphia to San Francisco, Atlanta to Seattle, from the black ghettos of D.C. to the black ghettos of Los Angeles, and every place in between where African-Americans constituted a significant chunk of the population, the streets will filled with infuriated marchers. Some of the demonstrations were peaceful, many more resembling a street dance than a political uprising. The majority, however, rapidly evolved into all out insurrection, with piles of rubbish, automobiles and buses set ablaze. Windows were smashed, stores looted, and unpopular owners of local convenience stores dragged into the streets and beaten. Several ordinary citizens with rifles were observed standing on rooftops shooting at whatever passed in the streets below. In seven major cities, sundown to sunrise curfews were imposed and the National Guard called in to try to restore order.

One incident which occurred right on the National Mall in Washington D.C. dominated the news media for three days and truly polarized the nation. Tensions were higher than at any time since the riots in Los Angeles in 1992 over the police beating of Rodney King.

Two officers in a patrol car noticed suspicious activity occurring at the base of the Lincoln Memorial and on the statue itself. They called for backup and shortly five black adolescents, age 17 to 19 were arrested and taken in to be booked for defacement of public property. But not before they had completed the job they had come to do.

They had just painted a big mustache in white enamel house paint on Abraham Lincoln and hung a huge sign on the chest of the historic figure. It was what was on the sign that caused most of the controversy.

Yeah, he’s got milk…
All the milk he can drink.
That’s because he’s white.
Us niggas can’t afford it. 

 

Local officials and politicos were so outraged that they demanded the young men be additionally charged with acts of terrorism, in violation of the Patriot Acts I and II. And because of unfounded rumors unleashed on the floor of the House of Representatives in a speech by a fanatic congressman from Mississippi, they were also being investigated for possible connections to blacklisted Muslim terrorist cells in Yemen and the Philippines.

Viewers of ABC’s This Week, one of the more popular Sunday morning news talk shows, sipped coffee and nodded their tacit approval over an exchange between George Will and the show’s host and regular anchor, Christian Amanpour, about the incident.

“I don’t know where they’re going with that. Meaning the Homeland Security people. Maybe they know something we don’t. But from what I can tell, these are just punks from right there in D.C. who took a break from pimping or pushing drugs or whatever other insidious things they’ve got going on, to disparage one of our greatest presidents.”

“I completely agree. I don’t get the symbolism here. It seems contradictory. I mean, Abraham Lincoln was the man who gave them their freedom.”

“Well, one of the more articulate gangbangers, one that could at least speak some English I could understand, said something to the effect that, yes, they should be free now but that’s not the way things have worked out. They are still being oppressed by the white man.”

“That’s gratitude for you.”

The follow-up ad campaign by the advertising agency that came up with the original idea was put on hold. It was called ‘MLK … does a body good!’ and featured Martin Luther King’s head Photoshopped on the body of Denzel Washington muscle-posing in a Speedo.


[ This originated at the author's personal web site . . . http://jdrachel.com ]