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okarol
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Photo is Jenna - after Disneyland - 1988

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« on: February 27, 2008, 08:59:36 AM »

February 21, 2008

I’m Ill, but Who Really Needs to Know?
By LISA BELKIN

ONE of the first decisions you make in the emotional hours
 after a scary diagnosis is whether to tell others. Most of
 us share the news with our loved ones, but what of the
 circles beyond, particularly those at work? Your boss?

At first, Richard M. Cohen, whose multiple sclerosis was
 diagnosed at 25, did not tell. Mr. Cohen — whose latest
 book, “Strong at the Broken Places,” recounts the stories
 of five patients with chronic illnesses — was starting
 what would become a hard-charging career as a television news
 producer when he learned of his condition. He feared he
 would be considered unfit. He kept his secret for years
 despite failing vision and shaky balance.

Marlene Kahan, in turn, disclosed her condition right away.
 Four years ago, when she learned she had Parkinson’s
 disease, she had been the executive director of the American
 Society of Magazine Editors for more than a decade. With
 that longevity came security, she hoped.

Ms. Kahan was also afraid that the mix of symptoms and side
 effects from the treatments would leave her at “less
 than 100 percent,” she said, making it seem as if she was
 either slacking or even sicker than she was. “I didn’t
 want people to wonder and jump to other conclusions,” she
 said.

Gayle Backstrom, whose fibromyalgia, a chronic pain
 condition, was diagnosed decades ago, understands both paths.
 Still she advises to keep your condition to yourself for as
 long as possible, because that is safer.

The Americans with Disabilities Act prohibits an employer
 from dismissing or failing to hire a chronically-ill
 employee on the basis of that disability “if they are able to do
 the job with reasonable accommodation,” she said. But in
 many cases, “reasonable” and “able” and even
 “job” all become open to interpretation, said Ms. Backstrom,
 the author of “I’d Rather Be Working” (Amacom,
 2002).

An excellent resource for workers facing this choice, she
 said, is the Job Accommodation Network, a service of the
 federal Department of Labor. Most questions on its site, she
 said, come from workers, not management, and “they are
 looking for suggestions on how to do adjust their work without
 bringing it to the attention of their bosses,” she said.
 They buy themselves custom footstools and wrist-rests, and
 sneak off to restrooms to take medications. To hide their
 condition on the worst days, they call in sick, giving a
 reason other than their chronic illness.

Mr. Cohen did that for nearly 10 years. In “Blindsided:
 Lifting a Life Above Illness,” he recalled an interview
 for a job as a producer on the “CBS Evening News with
 Walter Cronkite.” He asked a friend, Robert MacNeil, whether
 he should mention his multiple sclerosis. Recalling Mr.
 MacNeil’s answer, he wrote: “Say nothing. Your silence is
 an honorable dishonesty.”

Mr. Cohen got the job and was able to keep his secret with
 scrupulous attention to logistics, quietly using public
 transportation to conceal that he could not see well enough to
 drive. Years later, the executive who first hired him
 agreed that he had been wise to stay mum. “I am not proud to
 say this,” Mr. Cohen quoted the man as saying, “but I
 don’t think I would have hired you if I had known.”

Celeste Lee also chose to keep the details of her life from
 her employers for years. An autoimmune disease she
 developed in high school, 25 years ago, led to kidney failure. A
 transplant was initially successful, but eventually her body
 rejected the organ. That left her dependent on regular
 dialysis.

At first, she managed it on her own with a saline bag and
 an IV needle. She then worked as an administrator at a
 Boston law firm, and because the process took 15 minutes behind
 her closed office door, “it was something they didn’t
 really need to know,” she said of her employers and
 co-workers.

The timing was sometimes tricky, but life went on. She got
 her master’s degree, was promoted, married and had a son.

But after she moved to take a job at Duke University, the
 simpler form of treatment began to prove insufficient. She
 had to switch to hemodialysis, which required that she be
 hooked to a machine that cleaned her blood for three hours,
 three days a week.

Shortly after, she was offered her “dream job” as chief
 of staff to the chief executive of the Duke University
 Health System. The high-paced work would require 12- to
 15-hour days. For the first time, she wondered whether her
 illness would hold her back.

She raised the issue in her interview. “At first they
 were uncomfortable because they thought that if they didn’t
 hire me I would accuse them of discrimination,” she said.
 “But I said: ‘No, we have to talk about this. It needs
 to be on the table.’ ”

She got the job. Now she is on the dialysis machine at the
 outpatient dialysis clinic at Duke by 7 a.m. on Tuesdays,
 Thursdays and Saturdays. On workdays she is at her desk by
 10 a.m., respectable by most standards, but hours later than
 her arrival on nondialysis days. She also arrives feeling
 “hung over” from the six-pound weight loss
 post-treatment, she said, another reason why she felt she had to be
 upfront. “On Tuesdays and Thursdays, everyone knows that I
 can’t always be accountable for my personality,” she
 said.

Mr. Cohen eventually also revealed all once he had proved
 himself. He then went on to squint his way through the
 Solidarity protests in Poland and the violence in Beirut, once
 staring down Palestine Liberation Organization guards
 because he could not see the guns pointed at his head. Eventually
 he left breaking news for the slower pace of documentary
 television.

Now even writing books is increasingly difficult because of
 his worsening condition. He wrote most of “Strong at the
 Broken Places” with his left hand, because his right
 side doesn’t function well. The patients profiled in his
 book live nationwide, so he spent a lot of time in airports.
 “Picture it,” he said. “I am legally blind, I have
 trouble with mobility, I was constantly lost and under
 pressure to get from point A to point B. More than once I dropped
 everything I was carrying, because I do that, and I had
 tears in my eyes. I thought, ‘I can’t do this.’ ”

Yet he commutes daily to his office on the Upper West Side
 from Westchester, where he lives with his wife, Meredith
 Vieira, a host of “Today,” and their three children.

“Barbara Walters is always asking me, ‘Why do you do
 that?’ ” he said of his wife’s former colleague on
 “The View.” “Because I can. You do it until you can’t
 do it anymore.”

That is Ms. Lee’s mantra, too. In recent weeks her
 doctors have confirmed that she faces a new challenge:
 nephrogenic systemic fibrosing. It is essentially a thickening of the
 tissue or subcutaneous skin that can affect muscle and
 organ functions.

“At some point I have to consider whether I will have to
 bow out of this position,” she said. “But I want that
 to be my decision, and I won’t make it until I have to.”

E-mail: Belkin@nytimes.com

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/21/fashion/21WORK.html?ref=health

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Admin for IHateDialysis 2008 - 2014, retired.
Jenna is our daughter, bad bladder damaged her kidneys.
Was on in-center hemodialysis 2003-2007.
7 yr transplant lost due to rejection.
She did PD Sept. 2013 - July 2017
Found a swap living donor using social media, friends, family.
New kidney in a paired donation swap July 26, 2017.
Her story ---> https://www.facebook.com/WantedKidneyDonor
Please watch her video: http://youtu.be/D9ZuVJ_s80Y
Living Donors Rock! http://www.livingdonorsonline.org -
News video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-7KvgQDWpU
boxman55
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« Reply #1 on: February 27, 2008, 07:39:29 PM »

everyone needs to deal with things in thier own way...Boxman
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"Be the change you wished to be"
Started Hemodialysis 8/14/06
Lost lower right leg 5/16/08 due to Diabetes
Sister was denied donation to me for medical reasons 1/2008
stauffenberg
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« Reply #2 on: February 28, 2008, 01:32:23 PM »

I have followed opposite procedures at different places where I have worked or studied, and I have found it is always best to keep a chronic illness secret, not only for career reasons but also for personal-social interactions.  Socially, people who know how sick you are will be afraid of you, will never let you climb out of your disease label to be a normal person, will condescend to you, and will automatically assume you can have no normal ideas or interests.  Some people enjoy playing 'medical police,' and will impose on you every bit of anecdotal idiocy about what people with your disease should be doing and not doing, regardless of whether they read it in Reader's Digest, heard it from a neighbor, or figured it out for themselves.  Other people become positively sadistic when they learn that anyone in range has a weakness, and they will view your illness as an invitation to abuse you.

In terms of career, although the law may forbid discrimination on the basis of an illness which can be accommodated, most hiring, firing, and promotion decisions are legitimately made on so many highly subjective factors that there is no way of proving how big a role prejudice against your disease played in the subjective assessment.  At most of the universities where I have been a student or worked, there were considerable official affirmative action benefits for people with disabilities, but I never revealed mine, reasoning that these benefits would not outweigh the prejudice against me.
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