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KGW 8 Update on Diana’s Story

Read full story by Daisy Caballero on KGW’s site.

Diana James suffered a brain bleed in May that took her into a coma. Now, the family is left to pay $160,000-$200,000 to medically fly her home back to Washington.

Author: Daisy Caballero
Published: 6:52 PM PST November 14, 2023
Updated: 6:54 PM PST November 14, 2023

VANCOUVER, Wash. — A Vancouver family is fighting to bring their mother, Diana James, back home after she suffered a life-threatening medical emergency overseas. And while she has started opening her eyes back in August, her full recovery is far from being over. 

“It’s a fight I will never give up to bring her home,” said Megan Kunze, Diana’s daughter. “It has all been an absolute nightmare. Watching your mom like that is very traumatic.”  

Back in May, Diana suffered a brain bleed that put her into a coma while traveling to Portugal, and after 180 days, she’s still there, with no word on when she’ll be medically flown back home — which will cost between $160,000 to $200,000. 

PREVIOUS: A Vancouver woman is stuck in Portugal after suffering a medical emergency. It’ll cost $250K to fly her home

While Diana is covered under Humana insurance, Kunze says they have denied paying for the bill three different times. 

“Originally, it was based solely on the fact that she was out of the country, so they didn’t have to cover it under Medicare guidelines,” Kunze said. “However, we have proven with the clinician’s help and with our legal team that it actually started occurring on U.S. soil.” 

According to Kunze, because her mom is a U.S. citizen, Portugal’s medical system is only required to perform life-saving treatment and stabilization of a patient. She has yet to see a neurology specialist or any rehabilitation treatment for her coma disorder — which is crucial to her full recovery. 

“There are these situations that I’ve seen with very similar parallels in my experience,” said Aj Roland.

Roland is medically representing the family on behalf of Connect Health as the case manager and clinician. He’s a healthcare executive with a background in special operation medical services.

“Really, when you go back and look at this with an analytical eye — and not an eye that is geared to denying the claim but one that really questions the data in front of you — you can see that clearly, this is a woman who is at risk and has a history of past traumatic brain injury,” Roland said.     

To make matters worse, there are plans to move her to a lower-quality hospital, where a nursing shortage and strike are happening. She is also on her seventh hospital-acquired infection, including pneumonia, which doctors say will just continue to worsen. 

“It is painstaking to watch your mother suffer from infection after infection after infection,” Megan said. “We’ve witnessed unsanitary conditions in the hospital. We’ve witnessed them not connecting her feeding tube and having it leak all over the floor.”   

Megan has reached out to local and state leaders. She will be filing for a repatriation loan later this week with help from Senator Patty Murray’s office. In the meantime, you can check out the family’s Gofundme and their website with resources and more of Diana’s story. 

KGW has reached out to Humana for comment but has not heard back. 

KGW Follow Up Report on Diana James

by Daisy Caballero

Link to Full Story | KGW (our local NBC news outlet) did a follow up interview today! A big thank you to those that continue to push our story and champion our cause! This event has been life altering for all of us and this will financially devastate our family indefinitely without assistance. If our story has touched you, here are six ways you can help us.

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Every Day, Being with Mom, In The Hospital

Every day we went to the hospital, only missing a handful of days over 6 months.  It was hard in the beginning….the not knowing if she would survive day to day.  Everyday was met with anxiety of even arriving at the hospital as they do not actually call you if your loved one passes during the night, they wait for you to come to the hospital the next day or call you in the morning. 

Once inside the ICU, every beep, every alarm was an imminent threat…a threat that her life continued to hang in the balance…..A threat that we might still lose her.  Watching the ventilator breathe for her, watching the ICP monitor fluctuate with the pressure in her skull, watching her blood pressure rise and drop without warning….all were constant reminders of how precious and fragile life is. 

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Lost

Have you ever had a life altering event threaten the very existence of who you know yourself to be…who others know you to be?  

I think about this question often.  Not just in the sense of me wondering about the changed person my mom will become but also in the ways  my brother and I will be forever changed….and those who are closest will be forced to change as well.

I have often felt lost in this dumpster fire…wondering who I am and who I am becoming, if I will like myself after this (because I’ll be honest, I was just starting to dig that chick at 43 years old!), if others would still love me…if there would still be enough good in me to love  The emotions we’ve experienced in the last 6 months have completely buried me.  We are in survival mode and I have no doubt that will wreak havoc on our bodies for years to come because it’s unhealthy to have this much cortisol coursing through your veins, especially for long periods of time.  

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