Description: This is
a VOA Special English General News Report.
See text below
Text:
Pat Rummerfield spends a week every month with
patients in the International Center for Spinal Cord
Injury at Maryland's Kennedy Krieger Institute. He
works as a spokesman and raises money for the
institute. He also provides moral support.
PAT RUMMERFIELD: "Being able to touch the lives of
others, knowing what they're going through, I myself
have been in those same situations, and I've had the
same thoughts going through my brain that's going
through theirs."
In 1974, Rummerfield broke his neck in four places
in a traffic accident. Doctors thought he would be
dead within 72 hours. They did not know about his
fighting spirit.
PAT RUMMERFIELD: "A week later, there was another
meeting with my father and they said that I had
beaten a billion to one odds. That they were pretty
positive that I was going to live, but the prognosis
was still grim."
He spent one year in a physical rehabilitation
center. Then, he and his father decided to direct
his recovery on their own.
PAT RUMMERFIELD: "It was very intense, five hours a
day. Whatever moved, I'd lift a weight with it. You
know, very slowly, very, very slowly things started
coming back. It took about three and one-half years,
but I could drag my right side for about 100 feet.
Then I'd have to sit down and rest or take a nap."
After 17 years of work, Rummerfield is considered a
fully functional quadriplegic. Many people call him
a "walking miracle." Then, he decided to set some
records.
PAT RUMMERFIELD: "When I got to that point where I
could run, I immediately started doing small, little
races as ways of raising money, of raising funds for
spinal cord research, and I've never stopped."
He did more than just run. He completed a triathlon
sporting event, drives race cars and holds the land
speed record for electric cars. Doctors have trouble
explaining Rummerfield's recovery. But Dr. John
McDonald notes his mental strength.
JOHN McDONALD: "He's got the determination of a
warrior. He fights through pain. He'll fight through
any ... he will never give up."
The National Spinal Cord Injury Association says
less than one percent of patients with spinal cord
injuries fully recover. Ann Choe is a medical
researcher.
ANN CHOE: "By studying his case both, you know,
structurally in the brain and spinal cord,
functionally, we hope to see what made him ... what
made it possible for him to recover. And those
findings, hopefully, we can and will be able to
eventually apply to other patients."
Rummerfield works with patients like Erin. Her
spinal cord was damaged when she and her conjoined
twin were separated. Melissa Buckles is her mother.
MELISSA BUCKLES: "It means a lot to us that Patrick
has taken such an interest in Erin. And it tells us
that he has the belief that she's going to walk
someday, too. We look at Pat as a miracle, but
something that is attainable."
RUMMERFIELD: "At the end of the day, I really don't
think, you know, of myself as a hero or a celebrity
or anything like that. I just think that I'm just a
guy trying to help as many people along the way as I
can. My goal is to someday be a part of helping
everyone getting out of a wheelchair."
The road to recovery can be long, and nothing is
guaranteed. But patients at Kennedy Krieger know Pat
Rummerfield will be cheering for them, every step of
the way. I'm Mario Ritter.
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