JOIN VT | NEWSLETTER
VETERANS TODAY ON : FACEBOOK | TWITTER | FORUM
|

A soldier's last, valiant fight

A soldier’s last, valiant fight
ALS is service-related, but VA help for Staff Sgt. Homer O. Pledger Jr. took effort.

 
By Harold Jackson

I had expected the three-volley salute, but still flinched when the soldiers fired their guns. Funerals always put me on edge. Later, as the honor guard stoically removed the flag from the casket, and folded it to present to Bros’ daughter, I thought, "How appropriate."
It was fitting that retired Staff Sgt. Homer O. Pledger Jr. be buried with full military honors. After all, his death was service-related, a result of his tour of duty in the Persian Gulf. No, not in this Iraq war; it happened 18 years ago in Operation Desert Storm. Apparently, that’s where Bros contracted ALS. How, no one knows.

     

No doubt, you’ve heard of ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. It is also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, named after the Yankees slugger who was diagnosed with the ailment in 1939.

Occasionally on TV, you might see that movie clip of Gehrig retiring prematurely from baseball. "Today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of this earth," he says to cheering fans. But I’ve never seen film footage of Gehrig after ALS took its toll.
I saw that with Homer.

Within two years of being diagnosed, this tall, strapping man who loved life and everything about it, couldn’t walk, couldn’t feed himself, needed a computer that read his eye movements to communicate, and, in the end, could no longer draw breath into his lungs. Only his faith grew stronger.
Bros died March 22 at a Kansas City hospice, and he was buried five days later at the Missouri State Veterans Cemetery. He was only 54 when he succumbed to what has to be one of the cruelest diseases imaginable.

jackson_400



RIGHT: The honor guard removes the flag from the casket of retired Staff Sgt. Homer O. Pledger Jr. A veteran of Operation Desert Storm, Pledger had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS, disease. He died March 22.

ALS was first identified as a disease in 1869. Scientists still don’t know what causes it. But within two to five years, its victims typically die. It’s a progressive, neurodegenerative disease that attacks nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.

But people with ALS don’t lose their ability to think clearly. So, it’s like torture. Victims know what is happening to them, but they can’t do anything about it. That’s hard on them, and it’s hard on their caretakers – like Homer’s brother and two sisters, who were always there to nurse him through his journey.

The siblings had to wage their own war to get Homer veterans benefits that covered all of his medical needs, which really shouldn’t have happened, since he was only asking for what his service record said he was entitled to receive.

But anyone who has dealt with the VA bureaucracy knows nothing concerning benefits comes easy. You have to see this person, then that person, fill out this form, then that form, then find the right person in a position of authority to actually make things happen.

Since 2001, the Veterans Affairs Department has acknowledged that ALS is a service-related disease for soldiers who served in the Persian Gulf War.
The VA’s decision was based on a study that compared 700,000 U.S. military personnel who served in the gulf between August 1990 and July 1991 with 1.8 million personnel who were not deployed to the region. Those deployed were nearly twice as likely to develop ALS. No one knows why.

The ailment may be what, in many cases, was once diagnosed as the mysterious Gulf War Syndrome. What triggers the ALS symptoms, which often don’t become evident until years later – as they did with Homer – remains a mystery.

There has long been speculation that the illness might be related to an anthrax vaccine containing squalene that Gulf War soldiers were required to take. But back in the ’90s, the Army also thought exposure to fumes from the burning oil wells in Kuwait might have caused ALS-like symptoms.

Two 2003 studies confirmed that there is a higher incidence of ALS among Gulf War veterans, and that the rate of the disease increases as that population of men gets older.

Later, a Harvard University School of Public Health study released in 2005 showed that actually the incidence of ALS is higher among all men who served in the military during the last century, but not as high as those who served in the Gulf War. The National Academies of Science came to a similar conclusion in a 2006 study.

These results led the VA to issue new regulations last September, granting full health and disability benefits to any veteran who has ALS. Lacking scientific evidence of a specific link between military service and the disease, however, the VA said its new rule was issued as a humanitarian gesture. It expects 416 new ALS cases among vets this year.

The ALS Association hopes that the now clear association of Lou Gehrig’s disease to serving in the military will spur Congress to put more money into research of the illness, including the Department of Defense’s peer-reviewed ALS study. The association also wants the VA to renew enrollment in its ALS registry, which it halted in 2007.

I hope there’s more research on ALS, too. It is a rare disease, occurring in only two persons per 100,000 in the general population. But it is also a wicked disease that cripples people, and then smothers their breath, while they can do little more than watch their own deterioration. Soldiers who served their country deserve a better fate than that. Bros certainly did. So does everyone else.


Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts

Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=5914

The views expressed herein are the views of the author exclusively and not necessarily the views of VT or any other VT authors, affiliates, advertisers, sponsors or partners. Legal Notice

Posted by on Apr 19 2009, With 0 Reads, Filed under Heroes. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Apply for VA Loan Now Advertisement Get Educated at Excelsior College Get Educated at Excelsior College Get Your Loan Now Get Your Loan Now Get Your Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Become a Consultant

COMMENTS

To post, we ask that you login using Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, or Hotmail in the box below.
Don't have a social network account? Register and Login direct with VT and post.
Before you post, read our Comment Policy - Feedback


Comments Closed

3 Comments for “A soldier's last, valiant fight”

  1. Jim Davis, Veterans-For-Change

    My father was diagnosed with ALS in late May 2005 and passed away April 2006.

    It is one of the most awful illnesses I could ever imagine for anyone. It robs you of your motor skills to the point you can’t move, eat, swallow, and at it’s worst breath without special equipment. And worst of all it robs you of your dignity.

    With dad, it wasn’t truly noticeable until December 2005, he’ drop small things like a cup of water, a bowl of ice cream, then he fell a couple of times, and we knew it was only going to get worse and soon.

    Early March 2006 dad has asked to go to Sedona Arizona to see the snow on the mountains one last time and mom was more than happy to take him. Although it was a trip the doctors said he should not take, they went.

    It was only a 5-day trip but was cut short as dad began to have breathing difficulties.

    Once home, they were here for all of 3-4 hours when we had to rush dad to the ER at UCI Medical Center in Orange, California where dad stayed for a little more than 30-days.

    By then he was on assisted breathing (very mild) had a tracheotomy done and a feeding tube put in.

    We got to bring dad home where he wanted to be, and mom and I both provided his 24/7 round the clock medical care with a visiting nurse every other day.

    We got to have dad home for almost 7-days before rushing him back to the ER, where he passed away 3 hours later.

    I’m thankful in many ways he never had to experience the worst parts of ALS, but still to see the life drained from his eyes was the hardest part.

    From the time dad retired from the Marine Corps, till his illness took over dad fought every day for veterans, their rights and benefits.

    Today, I carry on the legacy he left behind, and founded the Veterans-For-Change a group of veterans and spouses who every month contact the members of Congress in their state and we voice needs and concerns and demands we have with the VA and VAMC’s.

    This is one illness I would never even wish on an enemy of the state it’s just that horrible.

    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/VETERANS-FOR-CHANGE/

    • God bless you and your work for Veterans. I have watched several family members die from incurable diseases. All the men were veterans. I am also a 100% disabled vet of the Vietnam era. I tip my hat to you.

  2. Barbara Pledger

    Thank you, Harold, for getting Homer’s story out there. He will be missed.

    His wife, Barbara

Comments are closed

 

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Join Our Daily Newsletter
  View Newsletter ARCHIVE

WHAT'S HOT

  1. Former Prisoners of War – You Are Not Forgotten
  2. Veterans Encouraged to Sign Up For Creative Arts Competition
  3. Egypt Military Rejects US Threats & Braces for General Strike
  4. Top 10 Veterans Stories in Today’s News – February 10, 2012
  5. Did JFK Nail an Intern a Day – Or Try to Anyway?
  6. Veterans File for Class Certification in Chemical, Biological Weapons Testing Case
  7. Act Up Against ACTA
  8. The 2012 Voting Experience – The Most Important of a Lifetime
  9. NATO Killed Children in Afghanistan
  10. DOD Opens More Jobs, Assignments to Military Women
  11. Media Whore Awards Show; The Nominees Are:
  12. Militia Group Finally Going to Trial
  13. U.S. Department of Defense Contract Awards for Feb. 09, 2012
  14. Bamboozeled- The NDAA Trojan Horse
  15. West’s Shenanigans against Syria, Iran
  16. Top 10 Veterans Stories in Today’s News – February 09, 2012
  17. New Online Enrollment Application Available for Servicemembers
  18. Army Looks to Ensure Consistent PTSD Diagnosis
  19. All We are Saying is Give Justice a Chance and All We are Doing is Telling Truth
  20. Chat I Just Had With Homeland Security
  1. Jim W. Dean: Guys, like I covered in the piece…I was not going to touch this at first, ever with the intern....
  2. AntiZ: It would be an idea for the Egyptians to demand all their relics and artifacts back from the US and Canada...
  3. norml: Why is the camp issue so vital to every human being? Because confinement is the final step before...
  4. nexus5: The deep dark secret of the homosexual community is the high percentage of its members that seek out sex with...
  5. nexus5: Then their are evil, Satanic Psychopathic pedophiles like Warren Jeffs and his 10,000 member Fundamentalist...


Apply for VA Home Loan Now!



SubscribeVT Radio Home Page







Archives