For nearly six years now, Greenwood's Phil Wood has suffered from Lyme disease.
The trick has been in trying to get certain people - namely, his former employer's insurance company - to believe it.
Wood
was formerly a timber buyer for Canal Wood. Not surprisingly, the job
often carried him into forests and other wooded areas. As is the case
with anyone in that industry, coming into contact with ticks was a
common occurrence.
"You can ask anyone who does it, it's not uncommon to pull three, four, five ticks a day off yourself," Wood said last week.Lyme
disease is named for the town of Lyme, Conn., where it was first
described in 1975 as an affliction of those who have been bitten by an
infected black-legged tick.
The majority of U.S. cases have been
reported in the northeastern states, though there have been cases in
every region of the country.
However, the disease is not
commonly diagnosed by doctors in South Carolina. The South Carolina
Department of Health and Environmental Control has reportedly
recognized only about 140 cases in the state, but Lyme advocacy groups
place the number much, much higher.
Wood, who was first
diagnosed with Lyme in 2003 by Charlotte specialist Joseph Jemsek after
being referred by Greenwood's Dr. David Riley, has suffered numerous
physical ailments in conjunction with Lyme, including swelling,
tingling and numbness of the hands, migraine headaches, dizziness,
fatigue, myalgia, arthralgia, chest pain, tinnitus, nausea and fevers.
"It
has completely affected my life," said Wood, who added there have been
times he has felt so ill that he didn't even know if he would wake up
the next morning. "I was a very active member of the community. And to
go from that, to nothing, has been unreal. It's tough to explain,
because this disease is inside of me."
Aside from the physical
battles Wood has endured, he and his attorney, Greenwood's Bill
Thomason, have also been participating in protracted legal battles to
help Wood gain the workers' compensation and health care benefits he
needs to fight the disease he contracted on his former job.
The
battle essentially began in February 2005, when Canal Wood sent Wood to
a doctor in Charleston for an opinion. Wood had filed for workers'
compensation benefits in December 2004.
That doctor, Ludwig
Lettau, reportedly suggested -- after what Thomason referred to as a
"cursory examination"-- that Wood had a sleeping disorder.
"He said there was no such thing as Lyme disease in humans in the state of South Carolina," Wood said.
Wood
was then denied further health care benefits for treatment, though he
continued to work for Canal Wood, requiring the help of an assistant.
Thomason
said many members of Infectious Disease Society, which aids numerous
insurance companies, still do not recognize Lyme in humans in this
state.
Wood later visited one of the nation's foremost Lyme
specialists, Connecticut's Dr. Steven Phillips. Phillips, as Jemsek had
done earlier, diagnosed Wood with the disease.
As it was not
being covered under workers' compensation benefits, Wood's visit with
Phillips was paid for out-of-pocket, with Wood's church pitching in to
help defray costs.
In September 2005, Wood appeared before
workers' compensation commissioner Michelle Childs. After considering
evidence and deposition from several sources, Childs ruled in favor of
Wood.
Canal and its insurance provider, Liberty Mutual, appealed
the ruling, contending Wood wasn't "suffering from Lyme disease or any
other occupational disease by injury arising out of and in the course
of his employment."
However, Wood and Thomason kept fighting, and Childs' ruling was upheld by an appellate panel in September 2006.
Again,
Canal and Liberty Mutual appealed, and this time the case came before
the Court of Common Pleas in the Eighth Judicial Circuit. Oral
arguments were heard in the case May 21, 2007.
An Eighth Circuit judgment in Wood's favor was entered June 19, 2007.
However,
no workers' compensation benefits were reportedly paid out to Wood
until earlier this year. On Jan. 4 a settlement was reached that would
garner Wood compensation pay dating back to his official 2007
termination from Canal to the present, plus continuing compensation.
The settlement also reportedly includes medical coverage that falls within the scope of Lyme disease symptoms.
For Wood, the ruling has come none to soon.
"Until recently, I was without (specialized) treatment for eight months," Wood said.
Wood's case could now be a precedent case in South Carolina in terms of workers' compensation and Lyme disease.
Wood,
who was recently featured on a regional television news broadcast, said
he has received an outpouring of support and communication from others
suffering from Lyme.
Wood said others struggling to receive benefits or get help for the disease should take a close look at his case.
"Use
this case. Take notes and get educated," Wood said. "It could help you
bypass a whole lot of stuff I've had to go through. If it will help one
person, we've helped somebody. I've met with many Lyme's groups. If we
can let people be aware, and help one person, that person could help
someone else. That's big for me. It's all I've been living for four or
five years."
Thomason echoed those thoughts.
"This is for
a positive purpose, to try and help other people," Thomason said. "If
this case can do that, I'm pleased to have been a part of it."
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