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Testimony of Bonnie Rock
A CALL TO CONGRESS - FOR THE CHILDREN
March 3, 1993, a beautiful Florida day
outside. Inside the pediatric intensive care unit the
nightmare was only beginning. My 5 year old daughter,
Stephanie, had just been diagnosed with HUS (hemolytic
uremic syndrome). A term only recently familiar to me
through the Seattle outbreak articles. Those letters,
HUS, became an all to familiar reality. HUS was something
you read about, something that happens somewhere else,
and to someone else. What a fallacy!
I listened intently as the pediatrician described the
kidney failure that was already in progress. He also
explained why her skin and eyes were turning yellow, why
her body was bruising to the touch and why she was only
partially responsive. His final words "its going to
get worse over the next few days". I had no idea
what getting worse could mean, this was already similar
to a chapter front a horror story. I did not have the
slightest clue how bad Stephanie would really get, nor
how fast.
Family and friends stood by me as I watched my only
child, a lively red head, go through something no parent
should ever experience. I longed to hold her, to comfort
her, during these painful days and couldn't. Her little
body was bruising with the slightest touch. Imagine your
own child asking you not to touch her because it hurts.
Thinking back, if my daughter were taken away from me
at that point my last memories would have been of
balancing her body and holding her head up as she was
screaming, crying, in a cold sweat, struggling to survive
this fifth day of bloody diarrhea, this fifth day of
hell. Parental instinct tells you to do something, but
little can be done for this disease except watch a
perfectly healthy child deteriorate. This must be a
nightmare, why won't somebody please wake me up?
Over the next few days the emotional roller coaster
would probably be better described as a runaway train in
the mountains. A little improvement, and little
regression. Finally on day nine I began to see me
daughter slowly emerging from this lifeless body.
Stephanie recuperated at home for several months. Nearly
three years later she still experiences medical
complications such as kidney and pancreas problems. I
have no idea where all of this will take us. We deal with
each medical problem one by one and one day at a time. I
am grateful for each day we spend together, good or bad,
many others are not so lucky. I would invite anyone at
FSIS to accompany Stephanie on quarterly hospital visits.
Maybe someone else could offer a better explanation as to
why she must endure hours of pain.
In the many months since Stephanie's illness I have
come to know many parents whose children have suffered
this terrible disease. As parents, we stand by and watch
our children's bodies become invaded by the mechanics of
modern medicine. These children are literally attacked
internally by this pathogen. Parents are tortured hour by
hour. Why are we experiencing this stance at the bedside
of America's children, watching them die or nearly die,
for no reason except industry greed. The key word here is
profit. Children are suffering, some dying and our meat
industry is being allowed to carry on "business as
usual". Governmental action has been slow. What was
promised after Seattle is still not in place, 3 years
later.
As a nation we need to accept the ugly truth and
evidence of the source of this pathogen, E.coli 0157:H7,
the cause of HUS. Mandatory reporting of not only E.coli
0157:H7 but HUS as well, on a state level will hopefully
detect outbreaks arid their source. We must encourage and
work with the few remaining states to require mandatory
reporting for E.coli 0157:H7, HUS and hopefully TTP.
County health departments must begin a proactive approach
instead of a reactive approach. Test meat from suspected
sources whether one child or ten children become ill.
Let's hire the needed meat inspectors to fill vacancies,
slow down the lines and allow these inspectors to perform
the task hired for. Microbial testing must be a part of
our system at whatever cost. No amount of money can
replace the children lost or pay for the suffering the
survivors have encountered. Let's bury the idea that our
current method of inspection - sight, smell, and touch -
works, in memory of the children lost across our nation,
and base our processing on science such as microbial
testing.
The USDA's inability to conquer the task of safety
with $600 million per year budget is a crime. In order to
steer the USDA away from the act of criminal injustice we
must band together in support of the FAMILY PROTECTION
ACT. Let's replace the burden of cooking with the task of
microbial testing. Microbial testing has been proven to
work in Florida recently and it has been in place in
other countries which have minute cases of this hideous
disease. We do not have the safest meat supply in the
world, proven by the 50 outbreaks since the
Jack-in-the-Box crisis. But we do have the ability to
make it the safest. Now we must motivate industry to make
the necessary changes and motivate USDA to keep promises
and work for consumer interest as directed in the FAMILY
FOOD PROTECTION ACT.
Let's answer the echoing screams of tile children in
pain, the children suffering this horrendous disease,
these screams calling to our government for help. The
answer is the FAMILY PROTECTION ACT. The nationwide
illness and deaths from this disease are the absolute
truth of failure in our current system. Let's admit it,
and work together for reform. In the end there will be
less shame in the failure of our system than in saying
our Government failed to admit it!
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