Pulmonary Fibrosis a Suffocating Disease..

  • par: Oly Diaz.
  • destinataire: http://www.whitehouse.gov/mailthispage.html

This is a second plea to serve my fellow disabled people.. Especially the one%u2019s that are looking to be disabled. Or are in the process of being disabled. I really think that social security administration should hire qualified personnel, personnel that are caring  compassioned people after all they are dealing with the sick, and disabled people. They deserve the respect and consecration, not because they are ill, because it%u2019s what everyone should be entitled to here in America.
I suffer from  Pulmonary fibrosis, which is a terminal incapacitating disease. Because  of the lack of experience of the social security personnel and doctors I was forced to wait 3 years to be disabled. Besides the fact that this disease should be moved to the automatic disabled list. Just like certain cancers.  This is a devastating disease and if all who suffer must wait to go in front of a judge to be finally approved for disability , no wonder disabled Americans are dieing before even receiving there first check. I personally know of one.
I was force twice to see doctors who%u2019s offices were substandard, I went to one with no AC here in Florida, and another Pulmonary specialist who had water damage in his office and there was mold on the walls..  We are entitles to get the best qualified doctors to screen us for our disability.  These doctors seemed that they weren%u2019t even licensed. 
Please conceder sending a fact finder to audit the SSA and see what can be done for the millions who are counting on fair quality, and most important  compassionate  personnel to qualify the true disabled Americans. We just asked to be treated with respect, and understanding. We need caring employees that are properly trained to deal with the many problems and issues of the disabled. Not to be treated like if we were all scammer, guilty until proven innocent


Prominent People who have died from Pulmonary Fibrosis

The wind whispers through the trees
As the leaves gently float to the ground.
Their beauty so vibrant one can%u2019t help but see
Yet their fall so gentle it makes not a sound.

And so it is with you, who have passed away
Your lives a wondrous tapestry to behold
And yet your voices silenced along the way
But your silence reverberates with a sad echo!

Leaving behind emptiness that no one can fill
Mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers, Aunts, Uncles, lovers, friends.
Your fight was one we all can relate to; your pain was oh so real.
It%u2019s in your memory we vow to fight for help, for these illnesses to end.

We feel your pain, your anguish and heartache
You%u2019re struggles were more than any one person should bear.
May your names remain here, leaving an impact only you can make.
Gone.. but never forgotten.. as long as I am here!

With love
Melanie Woodruff

Laurance Rockefeller, a conservationist, philanthropist and leading figure in the field of venture capital, died in his sleep Sunday morning July 11, 2004. He was 94. The cause of death was pulmonary fibrosis,

Marlon Brando's  Death July 1 2004 at UCLA Medical Center was caused by Pulmonary Fibrosis a condition the involves scaring of the lungs.

William Edward Simon, who was secretary of the treasury under President Nixon and later in life gave his entire fortune to charity, died Saturday, June 3, 2000


Actor James Doohan, best known as the feisty, Scottish-accented chief engineer on television's original Star Trek series - a role immortalised by the catch phrase Beam me up, Scotty - died on Wednesday at age 85, his manager said. Doohan died at his home in the Seattle suburb of Redmond, Washington, of complications from chronic lung disease pulmonary fibrosis,


Gordon Jump, who played a befuddled radio station manager on the sitcom. Jump played Arthur Carlson in ``WKRP in Cincinnati,'' which aired on CBS from 1978-82 and featured Gary Sandy, Loni Anderson, Tim Reid, Howard Hesseman and Richard Sanders as the ragtag station's crew. and made his mark in commercials as the lonely Maytag repairman, died Monday. He was 71. Jump suffered from pulmonary fibrosis. 

 

 

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