
Testimony
of Rainer Mueller
Entered into the
Congressional Record in February 1995
Hello, my name is Rainer Mueller and I have traveled
here from Oceanside, California. . .more than anything in
the world, I wish I didn't have to be here. . .but I do.
No, I'm not afraid of Washington, DC or public speaking.
I wish I didn't have to be concerned about E.coli
O157:H7. . .I wish I could be home with my family
enjoying the warm California sunshine. But I can't. You
see, I'm a victim of E.coli. Oh, you can't see any
outward signs? You probably won't. Why? Because on
November 3, 1993 my thirteen year-old son, Eric Jackson
Mueller, died after eating an E.coli infested
cheeseburger from one of the national burger chains in
his own hometown of Oceanside.
My son
paid the ultimate price for eating one of his favorite
foods. And this is in a country rapidly approaching the
21st century, considered by many to be a world leader.
But its meat inspection laws are holdovers from the 19th
century. Could you imagine if the FAA still utilized the
same aviation regulations from the age of the Wright
brothers with today's jet travel? Consumers wouldn't
stand for it! And so it is now with government meat
inspection.
Death by E.coli and hemolytic uremic syndrome is a
very painful and tortuous death. As a parent standing by
an watching my only son go through incredible agony and
pain before he lost consciousness and died, was something
I don't even wish on my worst enemy. Immediately before
slipping into unconsciousness, Eric screamed, "Get
my dad!" Those were the last words he ever said. I
couldn't do anything for him. I am haunted daily by this
incredible, totally senseless tragedy.
Although I am the son of surgeon and served a hospital
corpsman in the United States Navy, and my wife,
Marianne, a daughter of another surgeon, my trust with
the medical professional has be totally shaken. The day
Eric came down with bloody diarrhea, I rushed him to our
clinic were he was diagnosed with appendicitis. He was
immediately admitted to our local hospital where an
appendectomy was performed. His appendix was totally
normal. Baffled, the doctors ordered culture tests which
then erroneously detected amebiasis. With this diagnosis
Eric was prescribed the powerful drug, Flagyl, and two
days after his appendectomy, he was sent home. This was a
Friday night. He wasn't getting any better during the
weekend, in fact he was getting sicker and sicker.
My wife, a former pharmacy technician at the same
hospital, all along suspected E.coli because less than a
year earlier a six year old girl from a neighboring
community died under extremely similar circumstances.
That girl was Lauren Rudolph, and her mother, Roni, is
also here today. Marianne continually expressed those
concerns to the doctors treating Eric, but because the
lab tests didn't show an E.coli, her concerns were
dismissed as those of a frantic mother.
On Monday morning my wife called the doctor's office,
informing him that Eric wasn't getting any better, and
seemed to be getting worse. These concerns were dismissed
as post-operative symptoms. Finally after the third phone
call to the doctor's office, the doctor relented and told
her to bring him to his office. Upon examination, Eric
was immediately readmitted to the hospital. His health
was steadily declining, and his kidneys were beginning to
fail.
As I was to learn later, this is the first sign of
hemolytic uremic syndrome, also known as HUS.
The doctors at our local hospital were still baffled
as to what was happening with Eric. In desperation we
called in Eric's pediatrician who had known him all his
life. He knew things weren't going right, and that the
drug Flagyl wasn't doing anything for him. And after two
days he ordered Eric transferred to Children's Hospital
in San Diego. Where he was admitted to the pediatric
intensive care unit, under the care of the chief of
pediatrics.
That first evening in P.I.C.U., the chief of
pediatrics and another doctors consulted with me at the
foot of Eric's bed. He's got HUS they said, but nowhere
in the medical records anywhere could they find a single
confirmed case of amebiasis causing HUS. They remained
baffled.
I would later learn from Eric's medical records that
the initial amebiasis culture was never duplicated on any
subsequent tests. I would also learn that unless the
latest state-of-the- art tests for E.coli, called
polymerase chain reaction (or PCR) tests, were
administered, the percentage of false-negative readings
for E.coli were very high. The PCR test checks for the
DNA in the toxins created by E.coli and has an accuracy
approaching 100%. The reagents for these PCR test is
between only $6 and $8, yet I have not been able to find
a single medical facility in the United States regularly
performing these test. expect for the CDC in Atlanta, and
they will only run the test if they fear a massive
outbreak.
Children's Hospital continued to treat my son for
amebiasis with Flagyl in increased dosages, but no there
was no improvement. The Eric started receiving kidney
dialysis, but he was still going downhill. And less than
60 hours after he was admitted to the hospital he lapsed
into the coma from which he would never awake.
He was placed on a respirator, and that evening he was
again operated on, this time for an ileostomy and a brain
shunt to relieve pressure from brain swelling. By the
time they were finished with Eric, he had a dozen
different tubes, IV's and monitors stuck in his body.
Two days after becoming unconscious, the chief of
pediatrics had a conference with our family and told us
that this amebiasis was a "red herring." Yet
they continued to treat him with Flagyl. I was to learn
later in reading the Physician's Desk Reference (or PDR)
that Flagyl should be immediately discontinued upon the
presence of neurological symptoms, something Eric was
suffering from up until his seizure and coma. They team
of doctors decided that their next step would be a total
replacement of all his blood. Which they were going to
start immediately. But when they got to Eric's bedside,
they discovered that his heart was rapidly failing, and
that he probably on had another 15 minutes to live. With
that they placed him on a heart-lung machine.
The following night Marianne had a vision while
praying with our 11 year-old daughter, Nikki. In this
vision she saw that the Flagyl was killing Eric. Marianne
immediately called the hospital and demanded that they
discontinue it. The staff balked, and said they would
wait until the following morning and discuss it with the
chief of pediatrics. No, my wife insisted, she knew here
rights and demanded they immediately discontinue the
drug. The staff complied.
The next morning when Marianne went to the hospital
was the first positive sign had seen during the entire
two weeks of Eric's treatment. His fingers and toes were
beginning to warm up again, and there was some reaction
to light in his pupils. Finally a ray of hope.
But those hopes were dashed later that afternoon when
we were informed of the brain function tests performed by
a neurologist. Eric, who had been his class president, on
the school's honor roll, captain of his soccer team,
assistant coach of Nikki's soccer team, member of his
school's surfing team. member of the school bank. and
member of the city's all-star Little League baseball
team, was now a vegetable.
After a conference with the doctors and our family, on
November 3, 1993 we decided to remove Eric's life support
systems. He died a short time later.
His
funeral was one of the largest ever held at the mortuary.
On the grounds of his junior high school now stands a
palm tree and a large burial plaque with a dedication to
Eric by his classmates and pictures of a surfer, a
trumpet, a soccer player, and a baseball player. On the
grounds of his elementary school is a stage with a plaque
dedicated to Eric. Both of these dedications are unique
to both of these schools.
I used to serve on the board of directors of our local
Jaycees, our chamber of commerce, and soccer club. I
served two terms as the president of Eric and Nikki's
elementary school PTA. But today I am only affiliated
with one organization, S.T.O.P.
Eric's life was tragically and needlessly cut short.
But I have made it my mission that Eric did not die in
vain. I never want to see another person suffer like Eric
did. I never want to see another family go through the
agony our family continues to go through today whenever
we walk past Eric's bedroom, see his photograph or hear
the name Eric. Eric's friends no longer stop by. I know
it's too hard for them.
The meat industry states it may cost $250 million
dollars if meat inspection laws are updated. Eric's
hospital care cost $250 thousand dollars. If his care was
average, and 5000 people a year die from contaminated
meats, then we are spending $1.25 billion a year just to
treat those who die. Add to that the cost of the other
97% of the people who survive food poisonings, and you
can see that $250 million dollars is just a drop in the
bucket in the overall scheme of true costs alone.
I am convinced that every one of the 250 million
Americans would gratefully spend an additional one dollar
per year to bring the meat inspection standards ninety
years up to date. If I could, I would pay the entire 250
million dollars myself, if it would bring Eric back.
There are no excuses for these outdated laws, only
pain and agony.
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