Matt Stinger's Story
RN Puts Young, Vital Face on Hemophilia
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Today, with the benefit of his plasma protein therapy, Matt is able to play some sports and take part in athletic activities like horseback riding.
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At a very young age, two things were quite clear to Matt Stinger; he had hemophilia and it wasn’t going to hold him back.
The 24-year-old Hatboro, Pennsylvania native is now a registered nurse, working in the emergency room of one of the same hospitals—Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia—that treated him as a child. Matt even has seen some of his former doctors while walking the halls, a sight he believes his physician’s never would have predicted.
Matt’s earliest memories of his health extend back to elementary school where he simply remembers being different. His parents, Susan, formerly with the Delaware Valley Chapter of the National Hemophilia Foundation, and Arthur, who worked for Philadelphia Electric for 29 years, passing away in June from pancreatic cancer, took some of the standard precautions for a child with hemophilia to help keep their son safe. From kindergarten to third grade, Matt wore a helmet and knee pads, almost all the time when at school or playing, though he characterizes it as no big deal. “I had a lot of friends from an early age that accepted it,” he says. Even when Matt was forced to use a wheelchair at school due to his ankles—his joint most prone to bleeds—his classmates clamored to volunteer to push him around for the day.
His folks helped make it easy for the students as well, “My parents use to come to class and demonstrate what hemophilia was,” Matt says. “My parents broke it down into kid terms, explaining why I wore a helmet and what infusions were.” Matt’s parents created a presentation that turned each factor into a construction worker, each with his or her own, unique job to complete. However, construction worker number eight was always missing, Matt has Hemophilia A, so, they explained, he needed to add factor VIII by infusing. Susan and Arthur also involved their friends and community in Matthew’s illness. Susan recalls the time when Matthew was little and using cryoprecipitate, in which many of Arthur’s coworkers donated plasma at one of three centers within an hour of their home.
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As a child, Matt wore protective head gear so that he could safely engage in normal activities.
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While many cases of hemophilia are hereditary, Matt’s diagnosis came out of the blue for his parents, who have no family history and whose older son does not have the disease. Deemed a random mutation, his parents came home from the hospital and looked hemophilia up in a dictionary, but were still unsure about what it actually was. To see what they thought was their healthy baby boy end up in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) right after he has born was frightening, but, Matt says they took it on as a challenge and vowed to make their life as normal as possible.
Matt has needed to replace his Factor VIII his whole life and today usually infuses three times a week. Recently, he’s had problems with his left elbow, so for several months now he has infused every day. The medication Matt uses allows him to complete the five-minute infusion at home, but he could do it remotely given that the medication does not need to be refrigerated.
While Matt does need to be careful, having hemophilia is not huge interruption in his life, especially with the therapy he is taking. “When I was younger, it was completely different,” he adds, explaining how he needed to push 60CCs of factor, which would take upwards of 15 minutes. Now, the constitution is just 6 (mls), and Matt credits advances in manufacturing and technology for bringing about this change.
As a child, he was limited not being able to play football or hockey, but Matt maintains that his parents were good at figuring out what worked for him. Matt played soccer and t-ball when younger and then starting swimming when he was eight, continuing throughout high school, where he also picked up golf.
Matt admits that his family did have to adjust, “but, overall we tried to have as few interruptions as possible.” When the family visited Disney World, they needed to make arrangements with hotel to store his medication on dry ice, but Matt credits his parents with doing a great job of not letting his hemophilia hold them back from anything and they’ve learned to adapt. He adds that they taught him to manage his disease at a very young age, enabling him to learn the importance of taking care of his health and allowing him attend college and live on his own in a dorm. Susan, calling Matthew a “character” recalls that he was able to infuse himself by the time he was six or seven, and demonstrated a bit of a capitalist spirit by charging neighborhood kids $.25 to watch until his brother, Patrick, informed his parents of his sibling’s entrepreneurism.
In high school, Matt volunteered with the ambulance squad, going on calls, learning first aide and becoming CPR certified, which is where he caught the medical bug. After earning a degree in psychology, Matt went on to become a registered nurse after completing a 14 month course for his Bachelor’s in nursing. Having a self-proclaimed love of the medical field, Matt now works several 12 hour night shifts a week in the hospital’s Level I trauma center.
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Matt's late father, Authur, made up stories about hemophilia to educate his classmates and teachers about the condition.
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Matt says he’s never had to leave a shift because of bleeding. Far from holding him back, he says he’s had opportunities that others don’t. Frequently, he’ll work with children with hemophilia or other chronic medical conditions that come into the ER. He says, “To connect on some level with those families is pretty neat.” Matt adds that some parents never think their child will be able to do anything, so in that sense he is a role model. He’s also able to empathize with what the family and patient are feeling when they are faced with a serious medical illness.
Matt’s also been able to give back to the hemophilia community through volunteer work with the Delaware Valley Chapter of the National Hemophilia Foundation, giving the occasional speech and stuffing envelopes. For five summers during college, Matt also worked as a counselor at the Double H Ranch, a Hole in the Wall Campsm in upstate New York funded by actor Paul Newman for children with chronic illnesses such as HIV, hemophilia, sickle cell anemia cancer. As a child, Matt attended the camp, which he describes as a, “really cool experience’ and exploration was encouraged under the watchful eyes of doctors and nurses. For starters, children at the camp can participate in a ropes course and use a zip line, two activities he was not allowed to do as a kid. The kids also visit an amusement park, work with arts and crafts and, of course, make the obligatory ‘smores around the campfire.
Next spring, Matt will be one of the keynote speakers at the Plasma Protein Forum, June 17-18 in Washington, D.C. One topic Matt is poised to discuss is just exactly how his life works, along with the daily challenges of growing up, versus where he is today with the advances in therapy. He says the medication has just gotten better and better and that he can’t imagine what new advances will come in the next 10 years. “Really, nothing holds me back now.”