Sunday, July 6, 2008

..Er…As I Was Saying….

First,  I want to say just how humbling it is to me to hear from the many folks who called, wrote cards, and dropped e-mails to me since I got pneumonia a couple of weeks ago. 

I was feeling like dirt during Julie’s wedding, and thought I was just fighting a cold.  Cold indeed.

That weekend now seems like a blur…more like something I read about in a book.  I realize now how bad it really was.

Changes must be made.  For the most part they’re acknowledgements to father time and diabetes.

You know those news stories that warn people with “chronic illnesses such as diabetes” and how they are more succeptible to complications from just simple things?   I used to read those stories…even write ‘em.  Now I believe ‘em.

My job as morning anchor for Hallerin Hilton Hill comes first.  By the way,  Hallerin probably will not talk about it on-the-air, but he did come to visit me at the house.   He spent  time with me here in the office.  I showed him some old family photos, and we talked about how much our fathers and grandfathers meant to us.  Hallerin is a good man…even if he is eaten up with that ‘pie in the sky’ optimism that he talks about in that “Brand New Day” speil !

I will have to stop doing afternoon traffic with Phil Williams.  I will really miss working with Phil, one of the quickest wits on-the-air at any station in America.  And he has a heart for people, too.  Although I enjoy doing the job, it makes for a long day and no down time during the week, only a succession of days that would always start at three-thirty in the morning and run until six at night, often with no longer than an hour in between “tours”.

I believe the Saturday show:  ”House That Dave Built”  is going to take on an increasing importance in the coming months.  Our economy is such that people will have to learn how to do more with what they have, learn new skills around the house, and find out ways they can get services and improvements that mean the most for their lives.  

We are about to see a tremendous surge in home-centered work that we perhaps have forgotten over the past decades- things our parents and grandparents knew about how to make things work, keep things running, and how to save money.  My vision for the Saturday show is to make it a place where that community can come for that reliable information.

The effort on that show, plus my regular news duties seems to be about all I can fit in my sombrero right now.

One other thing…..The doctors have made it clear to me that I need to have the gastric surgery, and soon.  It would resolve my diabetes and its complications.  I had bankrolled some sick days to use during recovery.   They are gone.  But some vacation remains.  ( this advice:  buy both short-and long-term disability insurance if you can afford it… as they say … “you never know”) 

To the person, the Citadel Knoxville management team has been one-hundred percent supportive of me, and concerned about my health. 

I have another class, then a consultation, and then,  likely a date for the ‘grand opening’ will be set.  Please understand, if I could do this any other way, I would.   I don’t want to wake up with a tube out my gut, and another out a very private orifice, and get marched up and down the hallway in a three-sided hospital gown.   But wearing a black suit and no shoes in a horizontal position seems like a pretty grim “door number two” pick.

Only one person has been more miserable these past several days:  my wife, Dena.  After being cranked up on steriods then ordered to rest, I was not a good, nor long-suffering patient.  But she was (is) a good and long-suffering wife. 

I don’t think I could be more fortunate. 


Posted by Dave Foulk at 00:36:01 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

RSV- Nothing To Take Lightly

Thank God, my grandaughter Sarah is better.  She spent the eleventh week of her life at Children’s Hospital recovering from RSV.  I didn’t know a lot about RSV then.  I do now.  It’s a nasty bug that can make children pitifully sick.  Here’s what the Centers For Disease Control’s Infectious Disease People say about it on its website:


Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common cause of bronchiolitis and pneumonia among infants and children under 1 year of age. Illness begins most frequently with fever, runny nose, cough, and sometimes wheezing. During their first RSV infection, between 25% and 40% of infants and young children have signs or symptoms of bronchiolitis or pneumonia, and 0.5% to 2% require hospitalization. Most children recover from illness in 8 to 15 days. The majority of children hospitalized for RSV infection are under 6 months of age. RSV also causes repeated infections throughout life, usually associated with moderate-to-severe cold-like symptoms; however, severe lower respiratory tract disease may occur at any age, especially among the elderly or among those with compromised cardiac, pulmonary, or immune systems.

Sarah was very, very sick.  The people at Children’s- all of them -were exceptional in their care. And I don’t see how they do it- it’s tough to listen to the little hoarse cries of a sick child.  As I have said before, I’ve seen some pretty tough things in my life.  But I still can hardly stand to see a suffering child. Sarah is improving and will probably be succeptable to colds for a while.  I understand there is a kind of vaccine available for RSV, but it’s expensive.  I wonder if the insurance company executives get it for their children.

This week, I have been struggling through some kind of crud, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it was a form of RSV. Maybe FGRSV..Fat Guy RSV.  And I wonder if one of a zillion tiny little coughs somewhere passed it along to me. It’s nothing glamorous..just a snotty nose, congestion and all kinds of misery. Hallerin and I have considered buying one of those little teapot instruments to pour some hot poltice into our noses.  I don’t know about you, but a teapot spout up my nose is a little more than I need right now.

I used about a quart of Afrin.  Have you ever calculated the cost of Afrin per gallon?  I did.  Let’s say you buy the generic, or get the real deal on sale for five dollars per ounce.  There are 128 ounces in a gallon. That makes Afrin figure up to a whopping $640 dollars an ounce. Along with that,I invested in a saline spray that is half the price of nasal decongestant. It doesn’t make me feel any better that salt water in a plastic bottle sells for $320 dollars an ounce. And I just got a prescription for some stuff that will cost ME $20 for a half-ounce, and no telling what the insurance company pays per gallon.  Plus, I got another prescription that would cost around a hundred bucks if I didn’t have good insurance. 

At the doctor’s office today, I heard that a lot of people are dealing with the same thing.  They have also probably bought a hundred bucks worth of over-the-counter nostrums…just like I did before I decided to give in and as they say in the TV commercial “consult my healthcare professional” and get some stuff that works. 

The nurses also said a couple of people came in with the real flu today.  Lots of people think they have the flu.  But unless you feel like you have been run over by a manure truck, kicked in the belly by a linebacker, and force fed a live weasel- trust me, it ain’t the flu.

My advice to you grown ups who think you can lick most any illness with over the counter stuff..listen to the Viagra commercial. Use the four-hour rule.  If your crud lasts four hours or longer…see your “health care professional”.

Posted by Dave Foulk at 21:46:58 | Permalink | Comments (4)