Gabby Giffords update – small steps

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Three months after the Arizona attack that left Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in a coma, she is walking, talking, and wants to attend her husband’s space shuttle launch. But will she ever fully recover? In this week’s Newsweek, Peter J. Boyer has the untold story of the congresswoman’s struggle.

Reports on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords’ recovery have been so positive that there’s even been talk of her running for Senate. But in conversations with Giffords’ staff, doctors, and husband Mark Kelly, Peter J. Boyer has learned that for all the progress Giffords has made, she still has a long way to go.

Since Giffords was shot Jan. 8, at an event at a Tucson mall, her family and staff, colleagues and friends have been eager to deliver stunning details about her recovery. The first big news was delivered by the president himself at a memorial service: “Gabby opened her eyes for the first time.” Dr. Peter Rhee, a trauma surgeon in Tucson, said she had a “101 percent chance of surviving” before transferring Giffords to Memorial Hermann hospital in Houston, where her new neurosurgeon said she “looked spectacular.” Giffords’ friends and staffers, optimistic about her recovery, have contributed to the perception that she’ll soon be completely better. Daniel Hernandez, the intern who rushed to her side during the shooting, said he’d had several “lengthy” conversations with his boss, and Rep. Shelley Berkley of Nevada said Giffords is “running a campaign from the hospital.”

Dr. Gerard Francisco, the physiatrist in charge of Giffords’ medical team, says he is quite pleased with his patient’s progress, although he acknowledges that outsiders, especially the media, might be misinterpreting what that might be in this situation. “Some people will expect changes to be big,” says Francisco. “I’m happy with small changes, as long as I see these changes every day.” Francisco says he aims for an optimized “new normal” for each patient. Music therapist Meagan Morrow, who is working with Giffords, seconds Francisco’s perspective: “After you have a brain injury, you are a different person. It doesn’t matter who you are.”

Giffords still doesn’t know the details of the shooting—though she now knows she was shot. Initially she thought she had been in a car accident, but as her husband read her his newspaper, she noticed he was skipping stories and tried to grab the paper from his hands. He decided then to tell her what had happened. But she still doesn’t know some parts of the story, like that among the dead were a 9-year-old girl, her beloved young staffer Gabe Zimmerman, and her friend Judge John Roll. “When she starts asking for more details, we’re going to tell her,” says Kelly. Giffords’ chief of staff, Pia Carusone, points out that Giffords isn’t able to speak at the level she wants yet, so “telling her something as tragic as this, without her being to formulate the exact, complex followup questions she wants to, is not fair.”

Still, Giffords is improving. Carusone says her personality is “100 percent there.” And Kelly doesn’t think Giffords will have to settle for a new normal. “I was gone for three days down in Florida for terminal countdown tests. I was away for three nights. And I could notice a change, and an improvement, in her ability to communicate.” That said, he warns that recovery and a public appearance is “months—not weeks—away.”

In the meantime, Arizona politics is gridlocked. Reports of Giffords’ imminent recovery have kept Democrats from entering a race for the Senate seat recently opened by Sen. Jon Kyl, while potential Republican opponents aren’t sure how to go about campaigning. Kelly says such talk is premature. “We haven’t discussed any Senate race with her,” he says. “And I have no plans to do that for some time. She’s focused on her recovery.” But when the time comes, he says, “I’m going to want for her what she wants for her, and I know she’s going to set the bar pretty high.”

Thanks to Daily Beast & YahooNews.

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R. J. Opus

R.J. is by turns, sentimental, political, snotty, sarcastic, angry, philosophical, opinionated, funny and usually fair. She is not religious, bigoted, sexist, ageist, boring, maudlin or Republican. She truly believes in your right to your opinion, even if it's wrong.
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5 years ago

[…] (Click here for an update on Giffords’ condition.) […]

RichieRich
13 years ago

She will never be the same, it will take years for her to be independently functional. Damn shame.

Michael John Scott
Reply to  RichieRich
13 years ago

Very true and very sad.

13 years ago

Glad she’s recovering. Why the hell did someone shoot her – and the others? Nutcase I presume?

dp1053
Reply to  Four Dinners
13 years ago

Well, he hasn’t gone to trial yet, but it appears that he is just your garden variety whackadoodle with a gun.

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