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A WOUNDED GI'S NEW BATTLE -- It's too early to
assess
if he'll walk again, but he no longer needs a
ventilator
to help him breathe.

Dillon Cannon describes the day he
was shot while his wife, Heather Cannon, center, and mother, Patti
Cannon, react to hearing the details again. (photo: KAREN WARREN:
Chronicle) |
Story here...
http://www.chron.com/disp/
story.mpl/front/4524544.html
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A wounded GI's new battle
Sugar Land soldier is one of thousands
returning home disabled
By ROSANNA RUIZ
Houston Chronicle
Humvee gunner Spc. Dillon Cannon scanned left, then right.
It was about 1 p.m., and his convoy had paused at a checkpoint near
Baqubah, Iraq, northeast of Baghdad, after a report that a man may have
planted a bomb. Just the week before, in the same area, an improvised
explosive device detonated under his vehicle, damaging the windows.
The team was on alert, but Cannon noticed nothing suspicious.
"I don't remember hearing the first shot," he says, "but I remember
feeling short of breath."
Five weeks ago, a sniper dropped this Sugar Land soldier, barely out of
his teens. The bullet struck him in the neck, exited his back and left
him paralyzed below the waist. As Cannon left the battlefield, he joined
a growing procession of service members coming home from the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan not in flag-draped coffins, but casualties
nonetheless.
The 3,000-plus death toll may get the attention, but thousands more
soldiers are coming home with horrific burns, mangled or missing limbs,
head trauma or spinal cord damage. The Defense Department says more than
24,000 have been wounded, about 11,000 of those injured so severely they
are unable to return to fight.
Consequently, hospitals run by the Department of Veterans Affairs have
seen a sharp increase in patients. In 2006, 5.5 million veterans
received services there, compared with 3.8 million in 2000. The VA's
budget increased by $5 billion between 2005 and 2006.
Cannon, whose combat experience totaled about a month, is one of more
than 1,700 U.S. soldiers with brain and spinal cord injuries suffered in
the campaigns. He is the fourth veteran of the current wars to be
treated at the spinal cord unit of the Michael E. DeBakey Veterans
Affairs Medical Center in Houston.
Reclining in a motorized wheelchair, he continues his war tale. His wife
of less than a year, Heather, also 20, and his mother, Patti Cannon, are
among the visitors in his private hospital room. Red, white and blue
bunting shares wall space with American flags and numerous messages from
well-wishers.
"An Iraqi national, a local, told us that somebody suspicious had
dropped something off that looked like an IED," he says. "It might've
been a setup, it might've been there, but we didn't know."
His team leader told him to get down, but Cannon couldn't move. His
hands and feet were like lead. Another bullet ricocheted off the turret.
He learned he'd been shot only after his team leader radioed the others.
The convoy was forced to push forward to reach a nearby aid station.
"I didn't know what was going to happen and I was like, 'Am I gonna
die?'" Cannon says.
His team leader, a sergeant he knew only by last name, Cruser, assured
him he would be fine.
"He told me to keep my eyes open and to look at him, and I remember
seeing a tear drip down his face."
At the aid station, Cannon made a doctor promise not to let him die.
From Iraq, he was flown to Landstuhl, Germany, where doctors used bone
from his hip to salvage a ravaged portion of his vertebrae. They
reinforced his back with metal rods and pins during a 10-hour surgery.
On Jan. 2, Cannon arrived at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
Washington, D.C., where family members joined him. He arrived at the VA
hospital in Houston on Jan. 23, and his family remains at his bedside
while he receives daily physical and occupational therapy.
During a session last week, Cannon used arm and wrist weights of no more
than 3 pounds to exercise his atrophied muscles. His arms function, but
Cannon's milky-white fingers remain mostly lifeless. Janine Copsey, his
occupational therapist, whipped up some popcorn so Cannon could work his
hands.
"I got one," he said. "I can pick up one at a time."
He also pecked at a computer keyboard with plastic wands attached to his
hands. He wants to become dextrous enough to play video games again.
More so, he vows to walk.
"I'm going to walk again as much as it's going to take out of me," he
said. "No matter what I do, I want to walk again."
For now, Cannon can be counted on to lighten the mood with jokes about
the bicycle ride he will take or the spinners he wants for his
wheelchair. His sense of humor and "smart ass" sensibilities help him
stay positive as he remains "fixated on living hour by hour."
He quickly became expert at maneuvering his motorized wheelchair,
equipped with two controls similar to joy sticks. All of his equipment
and medical costs are covered by the VA and will be for the rest of his
life. He also can count on monthly VA benefits of $2,300.
VA's growing numbers
The number of veterans enrolled in the VA
health care system is growing. Out of the 5.5 million who received
services last year, more than 184,500 saw duty in Iraq or Afghanistan,
according to the VA's 2006 annual report.
The VA budget has steadily increased since 2001. It stood at $74 billion
in 2006, up from $69 billion the year before.
More veterans mean more benefit claims to process, and that has led to a
backlog of hundreds of thousands. In 2006, the VA processed more than
750,000 claims for disability benefits and added more than 250,000
patients, the same report states.
In response to the number of soldiers returning with multiple injuries,
including head trauma, severed limbs and hearing and vision loss, the VA
developed a one-stop-shopping approach to treat soldiers called
polytrauma care. It has four primary sites in Richmond, Va.; Tampa,
Fla.; Minneapolis and Palo Alto, Calif. An additional 17 network sites,
including one in Houston, manage post-acute care.
'Positive indicator'
Dr. Sally Ann Holmes, chief of the Houston VA's
spinal cord injury unit, shied away from questions of whether Cannon
will walk again. It's too early to assess, she said. He has shown signs
of progress — he no longer needs a ventilator to help him breathe and
has regained strength in his arms.
"He does have some sensation below his injury, which is a positive
indicator. It certainly makes his chances of walking being better than
if he did not have that," Holmes said. "That being said, he doesn't have
any motor function below the injury at this point. But, he's still just
a month out."
She said Cannon's medical team also keeps tabs on his mental state. So
far, she said, Cannon has stayed "remarkably upbeat."
Should the paralysis prove permanent, Cannon says, he'll manage.
"I'll make adjustments," he said. "As long as I can do stuff on my own."
For the tasks he can't do, his wife steps in.
The couple met in March while he was stationed at Fort Lewis, Wash., and
they married in August. The first years of any marriage are always hard,
he said, noting that his wife "has her days." But, he's concluded, if
she were going to leave him she would have already.
After he enlisted two years ago, Cannon wanted to make a career out of
the Army. But his injury will likely end that dream.
He and his wife wanted to start a family. That will have to wait.
They also have to decide where they will live. His rehabilitation in
Houston could take from several months to two years. Her family remains
in Seattle, but his family and friends are in the Houston area and are
considered vital to his recovery.
That decision, too, will have to be made later.
Discussing 'what ifs'
Before he left for Iraq, the couple discussed
how his tour might affect them: What if he doesn't come home? What if
he's wounded?
"It had to be talked about," Heather Cannon said. "I hated talking about
it, but it had to be done."
Cannon's mother didn't want to delve too deeply into the topic. She lost
her husband, Bob, a year ago to pancreatic cancer, just three months
after the diagnosis.
Her son, she said, had always been intrigued by the military and
attended Marine Military Academy in the Rio Grande Valley for junior
high. She home-schooled him after that.
She and her husband supported their son when he told them he wanted to
enlist in the Army. They figured the war would soon be over.
"It just rips my heart out," Patti Cannon said. "I should be thankful
he's alive, but I'm still at the point where I'm angry this happened to
him."
Her heart sinks when she has to leave her son at the end of the day, but
she has an 11-year-old daughter, Kelsey, to look after.
He asks her not to go.
rosanna.ruiz@chron.com
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Larry Scott --