Jon Anderson can’t run like he used to.
The 66-year-old Vietnam veteran has been running marathons since 1976 and ultra marathons since 2003.
But in 2008, Anderson stopped running, four years after he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease.
“Probably running one mile would be very difficult for me now,” he said.
Anderson said for the past eight years, he saw the disease slowly outrun his body and affecting the way he walks.
“I kind of do more of a shuffle and that’s really difficult because
you have to will your legs to move,” he said. “Just moving your legs
normally, you don’t think about it you just move your legs from point A
to point B . . . But for me, and people with Parkinson’s disease it’s an
arduous process just to walk sometimes.”
Anderson said he questioned why he had Parkinson’s disease and decided to check with doctors for help.
“I didn’t find out anything that linked it at the time,” he said.
Anderson said he called the Department of Veteran Affairs and asked
what kind of treatment he should undergo following his diagnosis.
The department told him his diagnosis was not considered a service-connected disability, Anderson said.
READ MORE: http://www.wuft.org/news/2012/10/05/veterans-agent-orange/
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