Rare flesh-eating infection leaves Pennsylvania business owner in the hospital
By Cheyenne Corin
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DOYLESTOWN, Pennsylvania (WPVI) — A Montgomery County business owner is continuing to recover in the hospital after being diagnosed with a rare flesh-eating bacterial infection, a medical emergency that has kept him hospitalized since mid-December.
Peter Atkinson, 49, of North Wales, has been at Doylestown Hospital since Dec. 19 after doctors diagnosed him with necrotizing fasciitis, a rare flesh-eating bacteria.
Atkinson said the hospital’s swift response saved his life.
“If it wasn’t for the help of this hospital, I would definitely be dead,” Atkinson said.
Atkinson said his illness initially felt like the flu. He described spiking a 104-degree fever and noticing a mass in his chest area before seeking medical care.
“How did I get this? How did this happen? Apparently, it’s rare, but it’s not that rare because it happened to me,” he said.
He said doctors quickly realized the severity of his condition.
“I showed them, and it was like, wow, not even five minutes later, he came and said, ‘We have to do emergency surgery. We’re going to intubate you,'” Atkinson said.
The infection later progressed to sepsis, and his kidneys began to fail, according to his family. His sister, Marietta Atkinson, said the experience has been especially painful given their family’s history.
“Probably one of the most traumatic events in our life, second traumatic event. In 2016, we lost our sister to sepsis, very similar to what Pete had,” she said.
Family members said Atkinson began to show signs of improvement on Christmas. His wife, Sherri Paulson-Atkinson, described the emotional toll of seeing her husband hospitalized.
“My husband is a fighter, he’s a go-getter, he is always busy, and to see him laying there like that was really hard for me,” she said.
Atkinson owns a towing company and is unable to work for the foreseeable future. To help support the family, a friend started a fundraiser page that has raised $13,000.
“The amount of people that have touched me just in the last couple of days – I can’t fathom the help,” Atkinson said.
Paulson-Atkinson said the family remains focused on his recovery.
“He does everything for us, and we just need him back,” she said.
Atkinson is currently on dialysis. He is scheduled to undergo another procedure and is expected to eventually be moved to a rehabilitation facility to continue his recovery.
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