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Hospital comes to aid of grounded Air Force father
By SEAN PATRICK NORRIS Staff Writer
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The biggest challenge Air Force Staff Sergeant Sam Hernandez was supposed to face during his nine-hour layover at BWI Thurgood Marshall Airport was boredom and keeping his 2-year-old son busy.
Once on the plane last week, however, Staff Sgt. Hernandez encountered a whole new set of problems.

"As the jet was taxiing, I felt my abdomen continuously pulsing and I thought I had food poisoning. The cramps became unbearable and I had to go the bathroom and throw up," Staff Sgt. Hernandez said Wednesday from his bed at Baltimore Washington Medical Center.

The Air Force staff sergeant and his son, Julian, were on their way from their home in Fresno, Calif., to Germany, where they will live for at least three years while he works on F-16 avionics.

"I tried to go back to my seat, but this time sharp pains came back in my stomach and I had to go back to the bathroom," he said. " I kept feeling really hot then really cold. The flight attendants tried to do everything they could for me. Eventually, they told the captain they would have to let me off."

Staff Sgt. Hernandez was transported to BWMC, where doctors told him he would need surgery. Suddenly, a new problem arose - What would happen to Julian?

"I thought I only had food poisoning, so I thought he could stick around. When they told me I needed surgery, I told them to call my mother (in Fresno)," said Staff Sgt. Hernandez.

Nurses at BWMC told him that Julian might have to be placed into the care of child services.

"I had to be there by midnight if I wanted to prevent him from going to child services, but I had to drive three hours to LAX before a five-hour flight. So there was no way I was going to get there in time," said Pauline Hershey-Gambino, the sergeant's mother.

The hospital then did the Hernandezes a favor by stepping in and admitting Julian to their pediatrics wing for the night so he could be near his father.

Helen Goodall, the nursing supervisor at the hospital, was one of the officials who made the executive decision.

"The child would have been placed in foster care, but our census was low enough that we had room to admit him. We didn't want to separate them if it was at all possible," said Ms. Goodall.

At first the doctors thought Staff Sgt. Hernandez needed an emergency appendectomy. But he had already had the operation when he was born, he said.

After a few X-rays and CAT scans, it was concluded that he had a twisted small intestine that could have been caused by the appendectomy he received as an infant, Staff Sgt. Hernandez said.

He underwent successful laparoscopic surgery to correct the problem. The technique is a minimally invasive surgery similar to arthroscopic surgery.

Staff Sgt. Hernandez said he only has one complaint: Because of the nature of his condition, he was not allowed to eat.

"They've treated me really, really well other than them starving me," he said.

He has gone a week without solid food. He said the doctors told him it will take some time to reintroduce the food to his diet.

He still has a positive outlook on the situation.

"If anything, it helps me because all my furniture will be (in Germany) by the time I get there," he said.

He explained when moving to another country it usually takes months for all furniture to reach the destination. Now Staff Sgt. Hernandez will be taking some time to recuperate in California, allowing his furniture to catch up with him.

He had to spend a year away from his son because he was previously stationed in Songtan, South Korea.

"This will be the first time we will be together one-on-one," he said.

Published 03/22/08, Copyright © 2008 Maryland Gazette,
Glen Burnie, Md.