Austin Doyle

Austin Doyle

I have been living with and fighting with Gastroparisis for some time now. I am a proud dog dad. Living with this illness took my life through a 180. I have lost friends and still fight for family to understand. I have battled with deep depression that comes with this. The isolating feeling that not many understands that food had become my enemy. I now live with a gastric stimulator and am grateful that it’s made changes but just because it’s made changes doesn’t mean that I’m still not fighting everyday with food and nausea and other factors. This illness isn’t a glorified way to lose weight. This illness isn’t having a diet. This illness can be destructive and scary. I’ve had chunks of hair fall out and lost a severe amount of weight. My nails have gotten brittle from malnutrition. But I still get up everyday even the days I don’t want to. I still fight. I have a dog that needs me everyday. And I have family that helps me fight everyday even if they can’t seem to understand.

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Jasmine Stearns

Jasmine Stearns

I was diagnosed with Gastroparesis in 2021, but have been suffering symptoms long before that. So who knows how many years I’ve actually had this, because it sure took a couple years of complaining and a lot of appointments to get to where I am now. I used to be this fun, outgoing, always outside type of girl and it robbed me. It has taken everything away from me, to where I’m constantly in bed dealing with symptoms. I take so many medications in a day to “help,” but it doesn’t seem to be enough. This is such a debilitating disease, it relentlessly controls every aspect of my life.

On the bright side of everything though, I do have a wonderful support system. My family, my friends and boyfriend, who have given me everything they can in order to help. I’m so grateful for them and the support groups as well. They give me hope. I believe that I will get through this.

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Gastroparesis Awareness 2021 Tote Give Away 2

GASTROPARESIS AWARENESS MONTH GIVEAWAY #2

 We are giving away this beautiful GP tote bag in honor of Gastroparesis Awareness Month and as a token of appreciation for your advocacy efforts during August and throughout the year!  

To enter, please complete the form below.

Enter from now until 12:00 PM ET on Sunday, August 22, 2021

We will select one winner shortly after the contest closes. 

Winners will be chosen by random drawing from the forms submitted. 

Note: International members ARE eligible for this drawing.
[wpforms id=”16928″]
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Gastroparesis Awareness 2021 Tote Give Away

GASTROPARESIS AWARENESS MONTH GIVEAWAY #1 

 We are giving away this beautiful GP tote bag in honor of Gastroparesis Awareness Month and as a token of appreciation for your advocacy efforts during August and throughout the year!  

To enter, please complete the form below.

Enter from now until 5:00 PM ET on Tuesday, August 10, 2021

We will select one winner shortly after the contest closes. 

Winners will be chosen by random drawing from the forms submitted. 

Note: International members ARE eligible for this drawing.
[wpforms id=”16767″]
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You shouldn’t have to depend on luck when you’re given a diagnosis like gastroparesis

Kateland Kelly

Energy is such a precious commodity; you never know when it will run out until it does. Living with gastroparesis, a condition characterized by decreased motility of the stomach, is not easy because you lose your energy. Gastroparesis can be downright deadly, but so far, I am one of the lucky ones.

You shouldn’t have to depend on luck when you’re given a diagnosis like gastroparesis.

The only reason I am still standing, and still working today, is because of the educational privileges I’ve accrued over my career. Many patients living with this disorder receive substandard medical care because the lack of research, training, and empathy in the medical world. When patients lack the ability to communicate their symptoms to your medical team, they are dismissed but when medical teams lack the language to understand or diagnosis complicated conditions, we die.

I would be remiss if I didn’t disclose that I was a practicing Physician Assistant with over a decade of experience in primary, urgent, and rural healthcare. My background includes a combination of pharmaceutical sales, medical and creative writing, and clinical practice and yet when I was diagnosed with gastroparesis in my early thirties, I almost lost it all.

I found food to be a comfort, and, like many women approaching mid-age, I struggled with keeping my weight in balance. When the symptoms started, I did what any medical provider would do:

Start with lifestyle modifications then move up the diagnostic pathway to medical interventions

For almost six months, I adjusted my pillows, I avoided highly acidic foods, and I didn’t drink alcohol, but the heartburn progressed to nocturnal reflux which progressed to incapacitating pain. Concerned about my family history of Barret’s Esophagitis and gastrointestinal cancers, I made an appointment with my primary care provider.

I was dismissed.

I advised her that three months of over-the-counter interventions wasn’t cutting it and I asked to be tested for H. Pylori (a bacterial infection that is associated with peptic ulcer disease). She pushed back saying it wasn’t needed but when I pushed, I got it. The test was negative.

She wanted to stop.

I didn’t because the pain was too much, and I started to fear the worst case scenario based on my family history and my personal fears. It was starting to affect my daily activities and so I insisted on a referral to a gastroenterologist. She refused instead offering me a follow up with her in six months.

Normally, this is where many gastroparesis patients falter. They fall through the cracks of inadequately trained Primary Care Physicians and Clinicians and they suffer in silence. Sometimes, they lose enough weight to get the attention of a specialist but often they are advised it is “all in their head” and brushed off until they simply stop trying. They might be given an SSRI without addressing the underlying conditions or they might get a few doses of antiemetic medication and a follow up for fifteen minutes in six months. While there is absolutely a strong mind-body connection and a lot of overlap with psychosomatic symptoms, I also knew that there was a physical pathology underlying my clinical presentation. I used my medical privilege to schedule my own appointment with a gastroenterologist for an endoscope.

The next day, my PCP called me and said she would refer me.

What happened next shook my world. I was thrown into the subspeciality of gastric motility disorders, but I was observing it from the perspective of a provider turned patient. An endoscope followed by a barium swallow followed by a gastric emptying study revealed I had gastroparesis. Full stop.  

The evaluation fully stopped.

That’s it. The gastroenterologist shook his head, told me it was good I lost the weight because I was obese to begin with (comfort foods be damned) and that he could put me on several medications, but none were indicated for long term use, one wasn’t even approved by the FDA, and they were all rather expensive.

As the weight fell off, my options fell away, and soon I didn’t have enough body weight to maintain my previous life. I lost all my energy. I lost my light and I almost lost my life.

The last time I saw my diagnosing gastroenterologist, he advised me that losing too much weight “wasn’t a good look” and I was at risk for a feeding tube. No diagnosis, no prognosis, just dismal options to prevent me from wasting away and a shrug acknowledging he didn’t know what he didn’t know. I made the difficult decision to pursue a different course of treatment, and to seek a second opinion outside of my insurance bubble, but those opinions take time.

Now, I am lucky to be working with a medical team that sees me and understands patients are not just numbers on a page. I am lucky to be respected enough to command their attention and so when I suggest my leading differential diagnosis, I am listened to. Individuals living with gastroparesis know far more than the average clinician does and we are your greatest source of understanding.

Listen to us and support us, because we have lost so much more than the average person can understand. As a Physician Assistant, as an advocate, and as a patient I know that with proper care and improved communication we can not only survive but learn how to thrive once more.

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