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Police killing of man with Huntington’s disease spotlights need for affected families to emphasize proactive, dignified approach
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The shooting death of a Philadelphia-area man apparently
suffering from Huntington’s disease, which perhaps led him to try to run over
police officers with his car, has once again raised the perilously common issue
of how police misunderstand
HD.
Beyond prompting anger and the need for better police preparation,
the death of Joseph A. Pacini can also stir the HD community to combat the
stigma of the disease, redouble efforts towards treatments, and emphasize the
dignity of affected individuals.
According to reports in the Philadelphia Inquirer (click
here and here),
Pacini, 52, died Dec. 30, 2014, in a town near Philadelphia after officers from
three departments fired at least 22 shots, wounding him in the head, neck, shoulders,
and chest.
Pacini’s
one-time girlfriend and a close friend told reporters that he suffered from HD.
Family members said that Pacini’s father, who had HD, committed suicide when
Pacini was 21.
For the second time in less than four months, the incident raised
the issue of police response to HD-afflicted individuals. In September, police
in the small town of Westover, WV, held down Jeffrey Bane for nearly ten
minutes after he clashed with officers; he struggled to breathe and pleaded for
help. A bystander captured the scene on video (click here to read more).
Investigators in the Pacini case are conducting tests to confirm
his HD status and whether he was using drugs and/or alcohol. The local district
attorney is also investigating the justifiability of the shooting.
(Sadly, most media reports missed the HD angle. One, in the New York Daily News,
reinforced the ignorance and stigma surrounding neurologically and mentally
impaired individuals by poking fun at Pacini and referring to him in tabloid
parlance as a “sicko.”)
A volatile situation
According to the Inquirer, Pacini led a troubled life,
failing to finish his college studies, posting conspiratorial and threatening
YouTube videos, and fighting with his mother, the police, and others.
“[HD] is very often confused with schizophrenia, especially with
those who do have the mental disorder predominant in the beginning,"
Louise Vetter, CEO of the Huntington's Disease Society of America (HDSA), told the Inquirer. She said that HD can involve "paranoia,
anxiety, really, really strong fixation on things.”
“HD does not fit well into the norms of society,” advocate
Jonathan Monkmeyer, a Philadelphia-area resident
whose wife Sheryl died of HD in 2009 at 46, said in a Facebook conversation
with me. Jonathan did not know Pacini, but as Sheryl’s full-time caregiver for
many years he understood the awkward and difficult social situations HD people
face.
“This describes another tragic end to a difficult life for a
person thought to have HD,” Martha Nance, M.D., the
director of the HDSA Center of Excellence at Hennepin County Medical Center in
Minneapolis, MN, and the author of the preface to HDSA’s Law Enforcement Training Guide, wrote in an e-mail after reading press coverage of the
incident.
“It is easy to focus on the
police departments’ actions that directly led to Mr. Pacini’s death, and shout
for a different approach, criticize the police for ‘not knowing he had HD,’” she
added. “But I’m not sure that the presence or absence of HD would necessitate a
difference in the officers’ approach to a volatile situation.”
In the Pacini case, mental illness independent of HD seemed to play
a role, Dr. Nance observed. She pointed to the “general issue of access to
mental health care” as a key factor in such situations.
“In medicine, we believe that the police need to be involved if
there are homicidal threats, and we, too, call the police if we feel that we
are unsafe or in danger as we see a patient in the clinic or the hospital,” Dr.
Nance emphasized.
‘Be more public about HD’
“The other issue, and more relevant to the HD community, is WHAT
CAN WE DO to keep our Joseph Pacinis from getting to these kinds of crisis
points,” Dr. Nance continued. “And I think the first thing is to be more public
about our disease. HD families, more than anyone else, treat their
disease as a terrible secret, a stigma, something to hide and be ashamed of.
This creates a mindset that passes through the generations, that HD is like
being in a terrible underground tunnel filled only with darkness, and the only
way out is suicide, or to emerge with explosiveness and anger.”
By avoiding genetic testing and contact with doctors, HD people “delude
themselves into thinking that they are not entering the dark tunnel,” she
wrote.
The community needs to stop viewing HD “with hopelessness
and despair,” she added.
“What makes a difference is what you do BEFORE
you die,” she wrote. “I can tell
any number of amazing stories of amazing people with HD and their families who
have done amazing things for themselves, each other, the HD community, and the
world at large. There IS
life after a diagnosis of HD, but it can’t emerge if you are stuck in the dark tunnel.”
Everybody in HD families can and should
to get involved, Dr. Nance observed.
“If you are scared, find a support group, or talk
to your parent, sister, cousin, friend, pastor, teacher, or perhaps even your
doctor,” she wrote. “If you have
a family member who is unconnected, floating out there, undiagnosed,
struggling, reach out to them. Bring them to an HD meeting, or have them come
with you to YOUR appointment.”
Enroll-HD: proactive participation
I was numbed by the news of Joseph Pacini’s death.
After I had explored the Jeffrey Bane incident and then noted in
my most recent article that HD activists had skillfully reacted by building HD
awareness at an international police officers’ conference just weeks later, the Pacini incident seemed surreal.
Emotionally, I cast about for a way to react. I concluded that I
could do nothing in the case of someone who had already died.
Then, reflecting on Dr. Nance’s encouraging words, I focused on
how I could best contribute to the cause: I went for my January 5 appointment
to register in Enroll-HD, a worldwide registry and observational study of HD patients,
HD gene carriers like me, untested at-risk individuals, family members, and
volunteers.
Enroll-HD aims to facilitate scientific understanding of HD,
identify potential participants in all-crucial clinical trials, and therefore
speed the process of finding treatments. Enroll-HD is sponsored by the CHDI Foundation, Inc., the non-profit virtual biotech focused solely on
developing HD therapies.
I recalled what Joe Giuliano, CHDI’s director of clinical
operations and the chief Enroll-HD administrator, told me last year: the larger
the pool of potential clinical trial participants, the faster trials can take
place.
At the HDSA Center of Excellence for Family Services and Research
at the University of California, San Diego, I provided a research assistant
with information on my health and HD status, answered several health- and HD-related
questionnaires, performed a battery of cognitive tests, underwent a
neurological exam, and gave three vials of blood, which will be used to confirm
my gene-positive status and provide evidence in the search for HD biomarkers
(signs of the disease that can be used to test the efficacy of potential
drugs).
I also participated in several HD research studies sponsored by
the Center of Excellence.
Striving for a life lived well
During the four hours of testing, I
worried that I might someday lose control as Joseph Pacini did.
My thoughts were troubled: what if I act aggressively towards my
wife and daughter?
I found strength in Dr. Nance’s concluding observation about the
HD-affected and gene carriers:
“A life lived WELL with HD can resonate into future generations
just as easily as a difficult life or a terrible death.”
As long as I can, I will strive to defeat HD by assisting in the
search for treatments and by spreading awareness and understanding.
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