Our Stories

clustera on Mar 6th 2008

Stephanie’s Story

My daughter Stephanie Suzanne Sands was diagnosed with Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia- T cell in mid-July 1999. I would later learn that Stephanie’s was the 2nd case diagnosed as attributable to the Fallon, Nevada Childhood Leukemia Cluster.

In early June 2001 I again found myself traveling to the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center at Philadelphia to spend the day with Steph; she had undergone an UCB stem cell transplant there on May 23rd 2001. Although the transplant had gone very well with engraftment beginning soon after the procedure, Steph remained hospitalized. During my drive to Philadelphia I struggled to find the words that I had to speak to Stephanie that morning, that young Adam Jernee of Fallon who also battled ALL T-cell, had died the previous day in a hospital in Southern California.

Stephanie and I spent perhaps our first hour together that morning in idle chitchat and with Steph good naturedly complaining about hospital food and that sort of thing. She complained bitterly of how badly she missed her son. She could tell that something was bothering me and I could not delay the inevitable any longer.

There are no good words by which to deliver bad news and as gently as I could I told Steph of Adam’s passing. Stephanie turned away in silence and remained sullen and detached for what seemed like an eternity. After a while Steph turned back to me and asked me how old Adam was; I told her that Adam was 9 years old. Steph’s eyes filled with tears and slowly those tears were replaced with anger.

Stephanie’s Plea

“Daddy, they’re just little kids. They didn’t do anything wrong……Why won’t those bastards help us?”.

Stephanie Suzanne Sands died in my arms on September 1st 2001 at the age of 21. She left behind an adoring 3 year old son, Ewan Mikel Sands, and a heartbroken family.

  

THE FALLON, NEVADA CHILDHOOD LEUKEMIA CLUSTER

 

By her own words Stephanie planted the seeds of my activism that June day; her death lit a fire within me.

 

The Fallon, Nevada childhood leukemia cluster is the most aggressive attack of cancer in medical history worldwide, in terms of time/spatial clustering.  The official “investigation” into the Fallon leukemia cluster recognizes 17 cases of childhood leukemia.  In Truth, there are no less than 25 children who have been cut down by Fallon leukemia over the course of several years; no less that 5 of our young warriors have died.

 

The Fallon, Nevada childhood leukemia cluster was identified and exposed, not by the Nevada Cancer Registry or by the Nevada State Health Division, but by the parents of Fallon children undergoing treatment for leukemia at Oakland, CA Children’s Hospital when they literally ran into each other there.  Richard Jernee would later tell me that after encountering several other Fallon parents there in Oakland that “What the hell?” became the word-of-the-day among Fallon parents who found themselves thrown together several hundred miles from home.

 

The Fallon, Nevada childhood leukemia cluster soon hit the Public consciousness and the glare of national media attention forced CDC- the Centers for Disease Control to launch it’s first cancer cluster study in more than 20 years.  CDC and the Nevada State Health Division publicly predicted that their work would fail and several years later gloated in their failure as they closed their Fallon “investigation”.  As with all of CDC’s previous cancer cluster investigations, their Fallon study was doomed to be “Inconclusive by Design” from the very outset.  I know of no other individuals, agencies or businesses which claim to achieve success through failure, yet this is CDC’s stock in trade.

 

CDC’s Fallon childhood leukemia cluster study is it’s 109th consecutive failure at cancer cluster study.  If CDC were a horse, it would have been put down decades ago.

  

OTHER COMMUNITIES, SAME STORY

 

In 2002 Dee Lewis and community activists in Calvine-Florin, CA became alarmed at the excesses of cancers, many of them rare cancers, among their neighbors.  The CA activists were rebuffed and derided by governmental agencies as they presented their concerns.

 

Also in 2002 Terry Norbrock of Tucson, AZ began mentoring and supporting many parents in Sierra Vista, AZ whose children had been diagnosed with Acute Myelocytic Leukemia.  The Arizona Department of Health used every trick in the book to keep the Sierra Vista case count below “statistically significant” levels in order to avoid conducting a cancer cluster study there.  AZ DOH went so far as to hand off one of the Sierra Vista cases to the Nevada State Health Division for inclusion into the Fallon “study”.

 

In 2002 Paul Spracklen, father of a daughter fighting AML at NAVMEDCTR-San Diego bumped in to a woman there who seemed familiar to him.  During a brief conversation Paul and this woman realized that they had been neighbors living in base housing while stationed at Guam.  Within a short period of time Paul was in contact with a number of other former Guam neighbors whose children were fighting childhood leukemia at various locations around our country.  Through personal tragedy Paul discovered and exposed the Guam childhood leukemia cluster which struck the dependent children of US Navy and US Air Force personnel serving on Guam.

 

In 2003 concerned parents of children diagnosed with ALL and living in Hoisington, KS contacted independent university researchers involved in Fallon, Nevada and Calvine-Florin, CA studies.

 

More recently the story of the struggle of Trevor Smith formerly of McCall, ID has come to light, and Trevor’s and his mother Charlie’s work has begun.

 

Most recently Michael Barry and concerned residents of Victor, NY have discovered stunning clusters of cancer and autoimmune disease among the residents of 50 homes there which sit atop a known groundwater TCE plume.

 

The list goes on and on and on.  The stories remain the same, only the names and faces change.

 

These communities share one common theme; they have all been neglected and abused and ignored by Public Health.

  

DO SOMETHING, DO ANYTHING

 

In the months following Stephanie’s death I continued to receive many reports and rumors of rare cancers striking my friends and former neighbors living in Fallon, Nevada.  For months I heard stories of young Fallon boys diagnosed with a rare testicular cancer; other stories came to me of Fallon children diagnosed with brain cancer.  The media accounts of yet more Fallon children being diagnosed with leukemia continued.

 

In AUG2002 along with another Fallon leukemia family I appeared on the Phil Donahue Show live on MSNBC.  A representative of the Nevada State Health Division appeared via satellite; he had refused MSNBC’s request to appear in person and at no cost to the State of Nevada.  Privately this Nevada State Health Division mouthpiece had confided to Donahue’s senior producer that he could not face the Fallon families in public.  On air the then Nevada State Epidemiologist, when pressed to explain why it had taken him and the Nevada State Health Division well over two years to begin an examination of the cases of the Fallon childhood leukemia children,  mumbled and stammered “Well……well we had to make sure that our equipment and test tubes were clean.”.

 

In SEP2002 after consulting with friends and researchers I decided to conduct a volunteer health survey of Fallon, Nevada.  In my 20’s and early 30’s I was involved in PA politics at the county and state level.  Through my successes with grass roots political campaigns I was known as the “go to guy” for all things involving long shot door-to-door campaigning.  It was from those successes that I gathered the audacity to tackle Fallon. 

 

In the PR build up to the health survey the local media in Nevada dubbed my project “Stephanie’s Walk- the Fallon, Nevada volunteer health survey”.  The Nevada State Health Division groused and ridiculed my project; it would not take long to discover why they reacted so.

 

The evening before I traveled to Fallon to do the health survey in OCT2002 my phone rang.  Calling was Dee Lewis of Calvine-Florin, CA; a reporter with the Associated Press had given Dee my contact information and told her of my Fallon plans.  Dee and her CRI associates would conduct their own volunteer health survey of Calvine-Florin residents the weekend before I started Stephanie’s Walk in Fallon that following Monday.

 

Early that first Wednesday afternoon of Stephanie’s Walk, Dee Lewis and an associate walked into the war room at my hotel in Fallon.  Dee was exhausted, yet she made the effort to travel to Fallon from her home in CA to support me and my health survey.  That previous weekend Dee and her CRI associates had canvassed 8,000 homes and 25,000 residents of Calvine-Florin, CA.  I was in the middle of canvassing 3,000 homes and 7,600 residents in Fallon.  As tired as she was Dee insisted in taking a packet and doing some ground pounding for me, she would not take “No” for an answer.  Dee is like that!  Several hours later, Dee and her friend returned to the war room after covering their assigned territory.  Weeks later as I wrapped up the hard verification process of illnesses reported, one of Dee’s reports turned out to be the “trophy report” of all those cases reported to and verified by Stephanie’s Walk. 

  

THE BIRTH OF NDCA- THE NATIONAL DISEASE CLUSTER ALLIANCE

 

Many months following our respective health surveys, Dee and I once again found ourselves on the phone together sharing war stories and complaining about the sorry state of Public Health.  We each had spent of lot of time commiserating with others around our country who had experiences identical to ours.  Our experiences had taught us that there had to be a better way.  Our experiences had taught us that failure is never success.  Our experiences had taught us that Public Health has never truly tried to aid impacted communities and in fact intentionally takes advantage of those impacted and suffering communities.

 

It was a watershed moment as Dee and I realized “Well, why not us and why not now?”.

 

Over the course of the next year or so Dee and I gathered together with many people whom we had come into contact with over the years.  Many of our new partners were folks whom we might otherwise have found ourselves in adversarial relationships with.  We joined with people from Public Health who had the “skill and the will” to make change happen.  We joined with Dick Clapp, Dan Wartenburg, Frank Bove, Paul English, Amy Kyle and others from the world of Public Health. We joined with parent and community health activists who suffered at the hand of Public Health.  We joined with Agnes Reynolds, Jill McElheney, Terry Nordbrock, Paul Spracklen and others from suffering communities.  We joined with other activist and community based organizations around our country.  We joined with some of the finest minds in Science.  We joined with Mark Witten, PhD of the University of Arizona, Karen Montgomery, PhD of the University of Wisconsin, and others already mentioned here.

 

We all are from very different backgrounds and areas of expertise, yet we are all much the same in one very important way.  We all have the skill and the will, the focus and the desire to reach across the table for the common good. We all have the passion and the desire to drive change.

  

WHAT NDCA DOES

 

We reach out to, mentor and advise communities experiencing emerging disease clusters and those suffering toxic assaults.  We work with impacted communities to become self-determining and self-empowered.  We respond to each and every community which seeks our help.

 

We bridge gaps between historical adversaries and grow our alliances to benefit impacted communities.

 

We only accept success; failure is never an option.

 

We do what we do, because no one else will.

    

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