Dunmorean of the Month: Patrick Dougherty

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By Emily Fedor

At the home of the Dougherty family, there are over 200 thank you cards sitting on the kitchen table. Each card is for a person who has helped the family “put one foot in front of the other” over the past nine months.

Patrick Dougherty, 19, graduated from Dunmore High School as part of the Class of 2016. But Patrick wasn’t able to attend commencement in June. Instead, he was recovering from an extensive surgical procedure at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

“This isn’t the gown I should be wearing,” he said to his mother.

It was a snowy Saturday evening on January 23, 2016. Patrick had been vomiting daily since September, and he’d been experiencing excruciating back pain for the two months leading up to that night. The pain had progressively gotten worse–making it’s way down his back to his legs.

Karen Dougherty watched as her husband Jerry walked to the car, carrying their youngest son in his arms. Once settled, it was off to the emergency room.

They didn’t have to wait long for a doctor to examine Patrick at Moses Taylor Hospital that night. Karen, Jerry and Pat sat in the emergency room, waiting to hear everything was fine and that they could go home.

But at 9:18 p.m, their world was turned upside down. Patrick was diagnosed with testicular cancer with metastasis to his spine.

“Our whole world changed that night,” said Patrick’s mother, Karen. “It was the innermost raw emotions you could ever feel, and the worst part about it is we couldn’t help him feel better. As parents, that’s the most horrific feeling.”

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Patrick, left, and his older brother, Jerry (Photo Credit: Dougherty family)

By midnight, Patrick’s older brother Jerry and many of his extended family members were at his bedside–trying to comprehend the news they never saw coming.

Three days later, Patrick was being prepped for an orchiectomy at Moses Taylor to remove his left testicle in an effort to stop the cancer in its tracks.

In the weeks that followed, Patrick went through four rounds of chemotherapy while his fellow DHS classmates were enjoying their senior year.

“He missed his entire senior year,” Karen said. “ He’s had to miss some of the happiest points of his life–class night, graduation, senior week at the shore. Everything that should have been a fun thing, was not fun at all”.

Days before graduation, Patrick and his family traveled to New York, where he was scheduled to have a retroperitoneal lymph node dissectiona procedure involving the removal of lymph nodes in an effort to treat testicular cancer.

Doctors made a cut that began at Patrick’s sternum and ended right above his bladder. For eight and a half hours, they worked to dissect the tumor that was inside of him. Patrick was kept at Sloan for 10 days following his surgery, and unfortunately, that wouldn’t be his last hospital stay.

In July, the 19-year-old underwent a thoracotomy to remove more of the tumor in his chest. And just last month, doctors had to open Patrick up for the fourth time in order to stabilize his back. In some areas, they inserted rods and screws, while other spots the cancer ate away had to be cemented.

“He is the strongest kid I know…” Karen said. “Through everything, he has never ever complained about anything. He goes along with whatever doctor’s appointments, procedures, surgeries and pain daily… He is my hero.”

While Patrick has come far in his fight with cancer, the battle is not won yet. College plans are on hold while he recovers from his last surgery and takes the next step in his treatment plan10 to 12 rounds of radiation on his back to rid his body of any lingering cancer cells. And luckily for the Doughertys, this treatment can be done locally at the Northeast Radiation Oncology Center in Dunmore.

The support of friends, family, the community of Dunmore and beyond has been the light at the end of the tunnel for the Dougherty family.

A multitude of fundraisers have helped offset some of the financial burden that has come with Patrick’s surgeries and treatments. From the the t-shirt fundraiser sponsored by Depietro’s Pharmacy to the DHS Spanish Club’s 5K fundraiser to the community motorcycle ride spearheaded by the owners of the Bar at the Patch, Karen said her family can’t begin to put their gratitude into words.

Karen said the family is also beyond thankful for all of the doctors and surgeons who have worked with Patrick, their friends in New York who opened their home to them during Patrick’s stays at Sloan, the students and faculty at Dunmore High Schoolespecially Patrick’s homeschool teacher Kaitlyn Beavans–their family’s places of employment—Northeastern Eye and DaVita DialysisPatrick’s friends who have spent hours sitting as his bedside and everyone else who has helped the family get through each day.

“There have been meals dropped off at our house when the last thing we were thinking of was eating. Someone came over and did my laundry,” said Karen. “It’s been completely phenomenal how our family, our friends, our friends’ friends and the borough have embraced Patrick.”

With no history of testicular cancer in their family, the Doughertys never considered that could be the cause of Patrick’s pain all those months ago. They wish they never had to hear the doctors utter the word “cancer” on that snowy January night, but in the end, this journey has strengthened the family bond between Jerry, Karen, Jerry and Patrick.

After surviving these past nine months, Patrick’s mom now says that when people ask her if there is anything they can do, she only has one request:

“If you have children, hug them longer and harder because you never know.”

RailRider Faces Surgery After Short Moment in the Sun

By Steve Svetovich

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Chase Whitley of the Scranton Wilkes-Barre RailRiders faces surgery after unexpected injury. (Credit: MiLB.com)

Chase Whitley began the season with the Scranton Wilkes-Barre RailRiders before a successful call up to the parent New York Yankees April 27.

However, his moment in the sun lasted less than three weeks. After pitching through sudden elbow pain, the 6-3, 217-pound right hander exited a May 14 start in the second inning.

The diagnosis was a tear in the ulnar collateral ligament of the right elbow. He had Tommy John surgery just eight days later and is not expected to return until the middle of the 2016 season.

Whitley, 25, was impressive in his first starting assignment of the year with the Yankees this past April 28. He was in the regular rotation pitching 19 and one-third innings. He was 1-2 with a 4.19 ERA. He allowed 20 hits, struck out 10 and walked only five batters.

Whitley was 4-3, with a 5.23 ERA after a call up to the Yankees last season. He pitched 75 and two-thirds innings, striking out 60 and walking 18.

He made his major league debut May 15, 2014 against the New York Mets at Citi Field. It was a day to remember with 2014 National League Rookie of the Year Jacob de Grom also making his major league debut. Whitley finished the game with a no decision, but the Yankees won the game, 1-0.

It was the first time since 1908 that both starters in a New York Yankees game were making their major league debut. Whitley pitched four and two-thirds innings, allowing two hits and two walks while striking out four and yielding no runs.

Whitley is a 2007 graduate of Ranburne High School in Ranburne, Alabama. He attended Southern University Community College before transferring to Troy University. He was drafted out of Troy in the 15th round of the 2010 major league draft.

He made his professional debut in 2010 as a relief pitcher for the Staten Island Yankees of the Class A Short Season in the New York-Penn League. He shined there as a closer with 15 saves and a sparkling 1.31 ERA. He was selected as a mid season all-star.

In 2011, he pitched for the Tampa Bay Yankees in the Class A Advanced Florida State League and for the Trenton Thunder in the Class AA Eastern League. He pitched 75 innings of relief in 42 games.

In 2012, he pitched middle relief for the Scranton Wilkes-Barre Triple-A club. In 2013, he was back in Scranton Wilkes-Barre. He pitched in 29 games, including five as a starter. His first start came in an emergency role. Soon after, the club began stretching out Whitley’s outings as a starter.

He started the 2014 season as a starter with the RailRiders before making his major league debut May 15, 2014. Besides pitching four and two-thirds scoreless innings in his debut, he also hit a single for his first major league hit.

Whitley earned his first big league win June 6, 2014 at Kansas City after limiting the AL pennant winning Royals to just two runs over seven innings.

Whitley has certainly seen his career take its share of twists and turns.
He was known more as a dangerous hitter and third baseman while playing for the University of Troy, but it was his performance on the mound that earned the Alabama native his first call to the Big Leagues.

Now the Yankees must wait until the middle of the 2016 season to see what twist or turn the promising career of Chase Whitley takes as he slowly recovers from Tommy John surgery.