'It's just crazy': Why is Lyme disease treatment so difficult to find in Mississippi?

Brian Broom
Mississippi Clarion Ledger
  • Lyme disease is transmitted by black-legged ticks.
  • Due to wide range of symptoms, the disease is often misdiagnosed.
  • Many with Lyme disease are treated out of state.
  • Mississippi Lyme Disease Association formed by woman working to recover.

When Keith Bradshaw of Bolton recently told his story to the Clarion Ledger about contracting Lyme disease in Mississippi and his struggle to get proper care, it caught the interest of readers and others suffering from the disease.

Bradshaw said he was bitten by 10 to 15 small ticks in the fall of 2015 while cutting a food plot for deer. Within a few months he became so ill he thought he was dying. He was treated for anxiety and depression.

Buddy Black of Greenville said he got Lyme disease while hunting and describes getting care as a "nightmare."

After three years of his eyes being sensitive to light, loss of balance, loss of hearing and confusion, along with facial, foot and hand numbness, Bradshaw knew anxiety and depression were not the causes. After researching his symptoms, he determined he had Lyme disease and a Western Blot Test confirmed it.

Even so, an infectious disease doctor he was referred to wanted to run tests for other possible causes and would not treat him for the disease. Bradshaw received treatment out of state and is now recovering.

Lyme disease treatment: Searching beyond Mississippi 

Lyme disease is transmitted by black-legged ticks, often called deer ticks. Due to the wide range of symptoms that are associated with it, the disease is often misdiagnosed, according to Bradshaw. Another problem with getting treatment in Mississippi is some in the medical community don't believe the disease is present in the state.

"The doctors won't treat you because they say you can't get Lyme disease in Mississippi," Erica Broome of Hinds County said. "It's just crazy they're still saying it doesn't exist in Mississippi. It's just crazy."

Broome found a tick on her head on Jan. 7 and soon after developed headaches. She initially felt the headaches were caused by her new prescription eyeglasses. Then she began experiencing burning sensations in her neck, thirst, fatigue, dizziness, muscle aches, digestive problems and fluctuating body temperatures.

Remembering the tick bite, she suspected Lyme disease and had a Western Blot Test run. It came back positive. Her initial treatment in Mississippi was unsuccessful, so friends referred her to a doctor in Mobile. She is now recovering and feels fortunate she received treatment quickly.

Lyme disease symptoms: 'I got sicker and sicker'

Buddy Black of Greenville wasn't so lucky. Black hunts in Mississippi and other Southern states. He believes he was exposed to Lyme disease while hunting in Texas roughly 13 years ago. When he returned to Mississippi, he began to feel sick.

"I got sick and didn't know what I had," Black said. "I got sicker and sicker and sicker. I was missing more and more work."

Black said he couldn't find anyone in Mississippi who could figure out what was wrong with him and he was exhibiting 42 symptoms. After 15 months of suffering, Black made a graph. He placed symptoms in one column and then found a possible diagnosis for each and placed them in another column. The most common diagnosis was Lyme disease.

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Unable to find treatment in Mississippi, he went to a doctor in New York. The disease is gone, but he still suffers from some symptoms due to nerve damage.

"It's a nightmare," Black said. "It's just a dadgum nightmare."

Monique Pietrowski of Biloxi knows all too well the frustrations of those trying to find treatment in Mississippi. Pietrowski said she contracted the disease while working in New Jersey as a critical care nurse. Back in Mississippi, she ran into similar roadblocks while seeking treatment.

Even though she contracted the disease out of state, she's certain it exists in Mississippi. She pointed out that the disease is endemic in multiple counties in Alabama and one, Mobile County, borders Mississippi.

Where to get assistance: Mississippi Lyme Disease Association

"It's insane to think there's no Lyme disease in Mississippi," Pietrowski said. "These vectors don't know state lines."

For Pietrowski, the journey toward recovery became a calling. She formed the Mississippi Lyme Disease Association in 2014. Since then, she says about 200 people have sought aid and most of them have the disease.

"Most of the time, when people get to this point there's a good chance they have Lyme or a co-infection," Pietrowski said. "They get frustrated and they find me."

So, Pietrowski helps those who believe they have the disease. She gives them a checklist of related symptoms and helps them find medical care providers that offer effective treatment. The organization also allows those with the disease to meet others who have the disease or once did.

The organization became a nonprofit two years ago, and Pietrowski said funds raised are used to help improve care Lyme disease and related infections.

"We are using that to get medical professionals trained to treat these long-term infections," Pietrowski said. "I try to raise money to assist with that.

"There's only one Lyme-literate doctor in the state and he's not taking on more patients. He's booked a year out."

The Mississippi Lyme Disease Organization can be found on Facebook.

Contact Brian Broom at 601-961-7225 or bbroom@gannett.com. Follow Clarion Ledger Outdoors on Facebook and @BrianBroom on Twitter.