Hi Cerendipy,
Oh how I can relate to much of his situation and what you are dealing with as a family. So glad I popped back in here. I had to walk away for a while and take a little break from all things heart related. Messes with your head a bit. I'm now back in "research mode" as my time in the "waiting room" may be getting closer to coming to an end.
I'm 40 years old and am a Truck Captain with 17 years on the job. I've been in the "waiting room" for 10ish years. Lucky for me I don't have an aneurysm. I just have a BAV with regurgitation. Mine too was discovered during a routine annual job physical. I've been able to stay on line and on the truck the entire time...except for the one time an ignorant occupational doc took me off line because I didn't carry a letter from my cardio with proof of recent stress test in my back pocket. The annual physical is always an anxiety inducing adventure. The occupational doctors we've contracted with are awful and unable to think outside the box, or in my case, just trust my specialist.
NFPA 1582 is so great in many ways and so frustrating in others. The illness and injury prevention component is so important and has probably prevented many deaths. But...there is so much grey area and cover your ass ambiguity. This is what makes it so tough. It's in our nature as firefighters to understand the rules, play by the rules, fix the situation, and move on. That's why living in the waiting room sucks, especially when we fear someone will take away our livelihood and part of our identity. I can't get a solid answer from my department or occupational doctor what exactly would happen after valve replacement surgery. I'm ready to fix the problem and move on. I'm really not afraid of the surgery, but just want to know what will happen with my job.
People who aren't in the fire service or married to someone in the fire service will never understand, nor would I expect them to. I am lucky enough to wake up in the morning and look forward to going to work to do something I love. The sense of purpose would be devastating to lose, not to mention the years of training, sleepless nights, education, and discipline to learn the job and promote up. Most people aren't that lucky. My situation has now progressed some. I have a surgeon now telling me he would like to operate and my cardiologist saying we have "a little time". We are looking at later this fall most likely. The surgeon told me it would be "criminal" for him to put anything but a mechanical valve in me. If I go on lifelong coumadin therapy it would likely equal the end of my line firefighting career...because of NFPA 1582. Even though I know its totally manageable and I won't have any restrictions in my personal life. I would still be able to mountain bike, trail run, skateboard, and everything else I already do. Like surgery itself, i'm not afraid of Coumadin, but am afraid it will jeopardize my job. For this reason I have decided I will probably choose a tissue valve against most peoples advise, because I want to stay on the job. Hopefully by the time re-op is necessary there will be other opportunities. I believe I could be in a Battalion Chief or admin role and on low dose Coumadin. I'm just not ready for a desk yet!
I really feel for your husband being forced offline and not having any idea for how long. That is downright cruel for a firefighter. Light duty is like prison! In his case he doesn't even know when he's eligible for parole. Most people would be praying to put surgery off as long as possible, but I'm sure he would go in and fix it tomorrow if they would let him. Like I said, if there is a problem we want to fix it, not sit around and wait for the inevitable. I would suggest meeting with other surgeons. Explain the situation and see if someone would be willing to take his case on. Or, maybe the surgeon/cardiologist would help go to bat for him to get him back on line for the time being. That would depend on how strict his department is with NFPA compliance. It took me a couple of years to figure out who a good cardiologist match was for me. I had to fire a couple along the way. I plan to meet with a couple more surgeons in the near future. My first cardiologist 10 years ago told me not to run more than a 5k race. My current cardiologist cleared me to run a marathon a few years back.
Please feel free to hit me up with questions. You can also message me and I'd be happy to provide a phone number. These feelings and emotions are normal and all very relatable. Take care!
Eric
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