Showing posts with label standing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label standing. Show all posts

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Giffords standing on own, trying to improve gait

 FILE- In this March, 2010 photo provided by the office of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, Giffords poses for a photo. (AP Photo/Office of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, File)

  Doctors say Rep. Gabrielle Giffords can walk a little and is even trying to improve her gait. But the report Sunday in The Arizona Republic adds the congresswoman herself is planning to "walk a mountain."


Giffords uses her left side and has begun making limited use of her right arm and leg, a common effect of a bullet wound on the left side of the brain, said Dr. Gerard Francisco, chief medical officer at Houston's TIRR Memorial Hermann who works with Giffords daily.


"Her left side is perfect," said Pia Carusone, her legislative chief of staff. "She can do whatever you can do."


She said that even in her wheelchair Giffords has stringent posture: tall, tight, strong -- like always.


Nurse Kristy Poteet said Giffords pushes a cart up and down the hospital halls as therapy, focusing on using the correct muscles. More therapy comes from games of bowling and indoor golf.


The Republic report -- containing interviews over the past few days with her husband, doctors and others close to her -- gives the latest picture of her recovery 15 weeks after a gunman opened fire in a Tucson parking lot, killing six people and wounding 13 others, including Giffords.


The physicians place her in the top 5 percent of patients recovering from her type of brain injury, the newspaper said.


"She shows a lot more independence right now," Francisco said. "She's her own person."


Those closest to her tell of a woman progressing from severe brain trauma, but their words are without heightened expectations.


And despite the progress, it's still not clear if she will be able to attend Friday's launch of the space shuttle, which will be commanded by her husband Mark Kelly.


Giffords speaks most often in a single word or declarative phrase: "love you," "awesome," those close to her said.


She longs to leave the rehab center, repeating "I miss Tucson." When that day comes, Giffords told Poteet she plans to "walk a mountain."


Dr. Dong Kim, the neurosurgeon who oversees Giffords' care, said most of the physical and speech recovery happens within 12 months.


There were hopeful language signs even in March when Kelly said Giffords learned about the people killed during the Tucson rampage Jan. 8.


Kelly said he was reading a newspaper story about her out loud when she noticed he skipped a paragraph. That paragraph told of the casualties in the Tucson shooting -- news that set Giffords grieving.


"So many people, so many people," Giffords repeated. Poteet said she would find Giffords with heavy looks on her face, repeating "no-no-no-no-no."


For that reason, Kelly said he hasn't told her that the victims included her friends and colleagues Gabe Zimmerman and Judge John Roll, or a 9-year-old girl, and three others, the kind of older constituents she loves to help.


Kelly said he wants her to be able to process the emotions without fighting so hard for the words.


"The challenge is she knows what she wants to say, and she knows everything that's going on around her," Carusone said, but can't always express it.


The Republic reported that Kelly comes in the morning with coffee and the newspaper, heads to work at NASA, and returns to Giffords at night to talk. Sometimes, he takes a nap with his wife in her hospital bed, holding her close.


When he comes into the room, Giffords breaks into an oversized smile, Poteet said, reaching out her good arm to beckon him to her side, give him a half-hug.


Though doctors have not yet approved the trip to Cape Canaveral for the shuttle launch, they said it should be safe.


"We're very comfortable with her traveling," said Kim.


Kelly, who has been to space before, said his job "will be a little bit harder this time, just because I want to look out for her."


He intends to phone Giffords during the mission, but he expects the conversations will be different than on his last flight.


Now, he will ask her "how things are going and how she's doing and what's her day like," he said.


They have a particular phone goodbye, "but that's a secret," he said.

(Copyright ©2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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Saturday, April 23, 2011

School changes policy on standing during Pledge

 HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Students in one local school district do not have to stand for the Pledge of Allegiance if they don't want to. It's a policy change that even the superintendent doesn't agree with, so why did the district do it?

In this town of 3,600 people, there's an American flag around just about every street corner and for school kids, the daily routine of standing up and saying the Pledge has never been questioned until now. "They refused to say the Pledge and everyone's talking about it," said student Cherissh Garrett. She is a classmate of the two students that have become the talk of Sweeny. The high school seniors did not want to stand during the Pledge of Allegiance, something that the school district required. "There was no disciplinary action taken. It was just a request that they stand for the pledge," said Superintendent Randy Miscke. The students took their complaint to the The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Texas, who sent the school a request on April 14 to review its policy. This week, after consulting with attorneys, the school district changed its policy and it will no longer require students to stand during the Pledge. "Just let them sit there and be quiet, and if they don't want to, and everybody who knows what's right will stand up and do it," said Gary Woodard, school board member. In a statement, the ACLU of Texas says "Our bill of rights and American tradition protect dissenters and the majority just the same, and the right to express disagreement is a patriotic value that all Texans should fight for." "I might not necessarily agree with that, but I'm going to be legal," said Miscke. Friends of the students say it's more about teenagers wanting the freedom to choose. "I don't think he's opposed to the pledge, just that forced to do the pledge, and he just doesn't like it," said student Preston Freeman. We reached out to the two students, but they did not want to speak on camera. According to Texas law, students are required each school day to recite the Pledge of Allegiance to the United States flag and to the Texas flag. The law does not say anything about standing. Students can be excused from saying the pledge, but only with a written request from a parent or guardian. (Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)


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