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Doctors told the family their daughter had a 10-percent chance of making a functional recovery, meaning there was a 90 percent chance she might never be able to take care of herself again."We didn't have a good prognosis," said Tessa's mother, Julie Venell. "I think you kind of protect yourself from believing that." We’d hoped she’d be in the other percentage. You don’t even let that sink in.”
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“She’s had remarkable accomplishments for people who didn’t have a brain injury,” said Dr. Douglas Katz, medical director of the Acquired Brain Injury Pogram at Braintree Rehabilitation Hospital. “The fact she was able to return, complete college a year after and complete a documentary movie is just remarkable in and of itself.”
Tessa, who has lived in South Medford for the last three years, now works as a grant writer for the Ivy Street School in Brookline, which treats and educates a growing number of young people with brain injuries and other neurological difficulties.
Full Article and Source:
Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation - Medford Student Beats Odds With Brain Injury
3 comments:
What a wonderful story!
I agree! A real miracle!
How inspiring! And it's another example of the abuse of Gary Harvey, who is left to lay there day after day with hardly any human contact or stimulation. Elder abuse for sure.
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