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Home > Through Hell and High Water > Archives > 2006 > May > 26 > Entry

Chapter 21: THREE MOMS: HARDSHIPS SHARED, FRIENDSHIPS FORGED

Nearly two weeks after her son’s death, Carolyn Lewis was still searching for his body.

It wasn’t at Baton Rouge General, where he had died shortly after his evacuation. Carolyn called the local sheriff’s department.

I’m trying to find out where my child’s body is, she said.

Her sister called the governor’s office. Someone said he had been taken to Huey P. Long Medical Center in central Louisiana. But when Carolyn’s oldest son called there, asking about Preston Leon Johnson, the hospital had no one by that name.

She went on local television, pleading for help from anyone who might know where the body of her 25-year-old son had been taken. In the second week of September, she got in touch with Celeste Waddell. Perhaps the respiratory therapist from Charity Hospital could help.

Waddell had told Carolyn she wanted to stay in touch. The year before, Waddell had lost her own son, and she knew what Carolyn was going through. You will always have a place in my heart, Waddell had told her while they were both still trapped inside Charity.

After making some calls, Waddell told Carolyn it was likely Preston’s body had been taken to the mass morgue for Katrina victims set up by the federal government in a warehouse in St. Gabriel, La., a small town about 70 miles northwest of New Orleans. A funeral home would have to claim the body.

Carolyn told the local funeral director he would be able to identify her son by a tattoo on his left arm of praying hands and the words, “Only God can judge me.” On Sept. 13, the man found Preston at the makeshift morgue. The keepsakes Charity nurses had wrapped around his arm and middle finger before his evacuation — a wooden cross and a key chain with pictures of his little boys — were gone.

Recently, Carolyn sat in her small, tidy home in Lake Charles, La., surrounded by religious objects and family pictures. She wore a blue denim sweat suit and large silver hoop earrings, her hair piled on top of her head. She said her son’s death could have been prevented had he been moved out of Charity earlier and into a functioning hospital that could have given him proper care.

“I feel everybody passed the buck,” she said. “The president did his share of it, the governor did her share of it, and the mayor did his share of it.”

Although it was not the family’s custom, Carolyn had Preston’s body cremated. The remains are in an urn in her home.

At 55, she is helping raise two active little boys, her grandsons, ages 6 and 4. The last promise she made to her son was to be there for his boys. “I thank God for him,” she said. “I was proud of him. I thank God that he was mine.”

Sherry Hebert went straight to Hunter’s bedside at Earl K. Long Medical Center in Baton Rouge after saying goodbye to Carolyn. It had been three days since she had seen her son.

He had been evacuated from Charity Hospital Wednesday night. But she didn’t get out until Friday, Sept. 2. That night, she had begged everyone — the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the National Guard and the Louisiana State Police — not to make her fly from the New Orleans airport to a military base in San Antonio. Her son was lying critically ill in a hospital in Baton Rouge, close to her home. She wanted to head there. But authorities told her evacuees were under marshal law and now “federal refugees.” For the time being, they would do as they were told.

Almost as soon as they landed in Texas, Sherry and Carolyn had walked away, grabbed a taxi and gotten on a plane to Baton Rouge with a layover in Memphis. They were back in Louisiana the next morning.

When Sherry arrived at the hospital, Hunter was still critical and on a respirator. He was swollen all over; his kidneys no longer worked. He would remain in the hospital for 49 days. Sherry slept on the floor the first 22, while he was in intensive care.

If he had been evacuated from Charity a day or two earlier, she believed, he wouldn’t have lost his kidneys. But Hunter, now 24, got out alive, and for that she is eternally grateful. Had it not been for Dr. Ben deBoisblanc and all the staff on the sixth-floor ICU at Charity Hospital, Hunter would not have survived. By putting a tube into his chest on the way to the Tulane Hospital helipad, they had saved his life.

Hunter was eventually discharged from the Baton Rouge hospital, had a seizure and returned. In the coming months, it would be touch-and-go with more seizures and treatment for Goodpasture’s syndrome, a rare immunological condition with symptoms like those of leukemia. But he made gradual improvements.

On Saturday, Dec. 3, Hunter Reeves married his fiancee, 18-year-old Kristy Arceneaux. He wore a tuxedo and a cowboy hat to hide his loss of hair from chemotherapy. Dr. Ben was there, and after the couple was pronounced husband and wife, Hunter made a speech. He thanked Dr. Ben and resident Dr. Jeffrey Williams for saving his life.

On March 17, Hunter’s wife gave birth to a baby, Kali Ann. “She is a sweet baby and doing fine,” Sherry said. “Oh, she looks just like Hunter.”

The family hopes Hunter will be placed on the list for a kidney transplant. Sherry said they were told it could take a year. Meanwhile he gets dialysis and physical therapy three times a week.

In recent months, Sherry has spoken by phone with Carolyn and Celeste Waddell. Carolyn asked about Hunter’s wedding and told Sherry she had a gift for her new grandbaby. Sherry wants to surprise her one day with a visit.

“I think the three of us felt the heart-wrenching pain of what our kids were going through,” Sherry said. “They both touched my life. It’s something I’ll never forget.”

On Sunday: The fate of two hospitals and two men who helped lead them through crisis. Last of 22 chapters.

Permalink | Comments (6) | Post your comment |

Comments

By Madelyn

May 26, 2006 02:24 PM | Link to this

Tears well up in my eyes when I think of this series ending. Thank you AJC for sharing this beautiful story with us.

By dawn

May 26, 2006 04:55 PM | Link to this

God bless you all.

By jane

May 26, 2006 07:52 PM | Link to this

I am a charge nurse in a 14 bed ICU. I have copied exerpts from these articles and placed it in our units favorite reading rooms, the 2 staff bathrooms. Only other medical personel will understand the irony of that….with each I have placed a note…even on our worst days things can always be more horrific. I pray for all the staff, families and patients that had to endure these conditions. We all thought that after 911 we have “emergecy” plans ready to be implemented….we all need to work on that. Thanks for putting everything into perspective.

By cliff zeider

May 27, 2006 07:30 AM | Link to this

Hey, This is a shame, I suggest these three Mothers call or drop in the Mayors office and demad help. Cliff

By Karma Ashton

May 27, 2006 09:22 AM | Link to this

Beening at Tulane through the storm and now reading your series of articles, I have been truly lucky to have choosen such a hospital to practice nursing. In this month that we celebrate nurses and the hospitals we work, I must say this was one of the proudest moments from my 34 years as a nurse. The mantra that has been going through my head since coming to the hospital on Sunday morning before the storm was ” Patients FIRST then the rest will fall into place”.

By Tony

May 27, 2006 10:45 AM | Link to this

This is a good series;but there is a troubling aspect to it. I, like everyone else who lived through the immediate aftermath and worked through some similar operations, sometimes finds it frustrating that just about everyone that does not live in Louisiana keeps referring to the aftermath of Katrina and Rita (does anyone remember THAT storm, by the way?)as if things here are all back to normal.

The region is devestated still. To see a doctor or get admitted to a hospital here even now is a process that most Americans would not believe can happen in “this country”.

Well, quite truthfully, the region has not been yet taken back into the United States in that respect.

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