Spring 2015 - Shepherd Center
Transcription
Spring 2015 - Shepherd Center
healing the whole person Shepherd Center physicians take an individualized and intensive approach to rehabilitation care. Photo by NAME also inside Wearable Technology + comprehensive ms care + beyond hospiTal doors + dreams of an accessible Wedding news.shepherd.org | Spring 2015 Shepherd Center Magazine: Spinal Column® Spring 2015 Shepherd Center 2020 Peachtree Road, NW Atlanta, Georgia 30309 404-352-2020 magazine@shepherd.org news.shepherd.org Spinal Column® A Letter from James Shepherd Editor Katie Malone, MS Design Soloflight, Inc. Contributing Writers Sara Baxter, John Christensen, Amanda Crowe, Phillip Jordan, Katie Malone, Dean Melcher, Shawn Reeves, Jane Sanders, Scott Sikes, Mia Taylor Contributing Photographers Danny Acres, Louie Favorite, Donn Jones, Gary Meek, Brandon McCormick – Whitestone Motion Pictures, Phil Skinner Board of Directors James H. Shepherd, Jr., Chairman Gary Ulicny, Ph.D., President and CEO Emory A. Schwall, Vice President William C. Fowler, Treasurer Stephen B. Goot, Corporate Secretary Alana Shepherd, Recording Secretary Members Fred V. Alias, Gregory P. Anderson, David F. Apple, Jr., M.D., C. Duncan Beard†, Brock Bowman, M.D.*, Wilma Bunch*, James M. Caswell, Jr., Sara S. Chapman, Clark Dean, John S. Dryman, Mitchell J. Fillhaber*, David H. Flint, Stephen B. Holleman*, Michael L. Jones, Ph.D.*, Tammy King*, Molly Lanier, Donald Peck Leslie, M.D., Douglas Lindauer, Sarah Morrison, PT*, Julian B. Mohr, Charles T. Nunnally III, Sally D. Nunnally, John Rooker, Clyde Shepherd III, J. Harold Shepherd, James H. Shepherd III, Scott H. Sikes*, James E. Stephenson, James D. Thompson, Goodloe H. Yancey III† * † Ex Officio Emeritus Shepherd Center Magazine: Spinal Column is published quarterly by Shepherd Center, a private, not-for-profit hospital specializing in the treatment of people with spinal cord injury, brain injury and multiple sclerosis. E-mail change of address information or request to be removed from our mailing list to magazine@shepherd.org, or by mail to Shepherd Center, Attn: Shepherd Center Magazine Mailing List, 2020 Peachtree Road, NW, Atlanta, Georgia, 30309. Please include mailing label. Shepherd Center Magazine accepts no advertising. Spinal Column is a registered trademark of Shepherd Center. About the Cover: Shepherd Center physiatrist Anna Elmers, M.D., works with spinal cord injury patient Andy Collier, 42, of Hull, Ga., in a rehabilitation therapy gym. Photo by Phil Skinner Dear Friends, Forty years ago this summer, Shepherd Center was founded with the singular mission of helping people with spinal cord injury return to their lives following an accident or illness. Since then, we have grown exponentially, and our rather specific mission has broadened to include rehabilitation, treatment and research for people with brain injury, multiple sclerosis and chronic pain. While our scope has widened and our expertise has multiplied, our treatment focus remains firmly within the neurological system. For me, one of the more rewarding parts of watching Shepherd Center grow has been the ability to treat patients more holistically – expanding our care to include services such as recreation therapy, assistive technology and chaplaincy. We have been able to offer such a wide array of services because of the generous support of our donors, which have grown in number as the hospital has grown in size. With the addition of these donor-funded and other services, Shepherd Center now has a broader continuum of care than we ever imagined when we opened our doors in 1975. Most rehabilitation centers are not able to do all of what we do. And while our services set us apart, so does our staff. Collectively, our physicians have more than 282 years of experience (see our cover story on page 6 about our physicians’ expertise). Three of the longest-tenured physicians in Shepherd Center history are still employed here, and one is still seeing patients. Dr. David Apple, one of our co-founders and our first medical director, now serves as our medical director emeritus and is still active in research. Our current medical director, Dr. Donald P. Leslie, joined Shepherd Center as a resident physician in 1983 and was hired to our staff in 1986 (see the cover story sidebar about Dr. Leslie on page 11). Dr. Herndon Murray continues with orthopedic consultations after 40 years of practice and nearly 40 years at Shepherd Center. Our doctors aren’t the only staff members with specialized expertise in their fields. The average tenure of our staff members is seven years. In addition to the longevity and experience of our staff, we have a large group of volunteers and donors who have been with us for 30 and even close to 40 years. Emory Schwall has served on our board of directors for 35 years. And, of course, my mother and dad, co-founders Alana and Harold Shepherd, still serve on our board and remain active in the day-to-day operations of the hospital. While our expertise sets us apart in the medical world, our unique culture of intentional caring is what truly sets us apart. This culture starts with our staff and radiates to our volunteers, donors and patients. It is taught by our longest tenured staff members and passed on to our newest recruits. It is ingrained in everything we do and an important part of who we are and how we treat our patients both clinically and emotionally. Despite all of the changes and growth we have experienced in the past 40 years, our culture has remained one of compassionate, spiritual and holistic care for the patient and their family. Warm regards, James H. Shepherd, Jr. Chairman of the Board Contents Spring 2015 • Shepherd Center FEATURES over Story: 6 CHealing the Whole Person Shepherd Center physicians take an individualized and intensive approach to rehabilitation care. omprehensive for People 12 CCare with Multiple Sclerosis The Andrew C. Carlos Multiple Sclerosis Institute at Shepherd Center offers patients everything they need – all under one roof. Photo by Gary Meek DEPARTMENTS COVER STORY, Page 6: Shepherd Center physiatrist Ford Vox, M.D., works with patient Lamar Littles, of Atlanta, Ga., in the Acquired Brain Injury Unit. See news.shepherd.org for additional online content. 2 4 SHORT TAKES 5 Medical staff Profile 20 22 24 30 PATIENT PROFILE Research E yeing the Future of Wearable Technology T eresa Ashman, Ph.D., ABPP-Rp, FACRM Billy Wilkerson ALUMNI PROFILES FOUNDATION FEATURES HONORARIUMS AND MEMORIALS Gifts of Generosity If you would like to make a gift to support the work you have read about, please contact Scott H. Sikes at the Shepherd Center Foundation at 404-350-7305 or visit shepherd.org. S short takes Wireless RERC Teams with AT&T to Offer Workshops on Mobile Device Accessibility Features Mobile devices now come with a range of built-in accessibility features to help people with disabilities use their smartphones or tablets. But there are so many of these features that people may not know which ones will work for their needs, the features are too complex to set up by themselves, or they may not even know that these features exist. Thanks to two $50,000 grants from the AT&T Corporate Accessibility Technology Office (CATO), the Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center for Wireless Technologies (Wireless RERC) – a partnership between researchers and engineers in Shepherd Center’s Virginia C. Crawford Research Institute and Georgia Institute of Technology – is offering Wireless Independence Now workshops that show people with disabilities how to set up and use the accessibility features on their phones and tablets. “There is a huge awareness gap for consumers trying to set up a device for their needs,” says Ben Lippincott, outreach and education project director for the Wireless RERC at Shepherd Center. “The devices themselves have become so powerful, and the variety and number of user-configurable settings can be daunting to a user with a disability.” “The cell phone is a very liberating device,” says John Morris, project director for User-Centered Research at the Wireless RERC. “It can allow people with disabilities to enjoy greater social participation and give them access to technology that can be critical to employment. But, it can take some effort to maximize its potential.” The 90-minute workshops – free to attendees regardless of their mobile service provider – give an overview of the accessibility and assistive technology features found on the latest versions of any mobile device with Apple’s IOS 8 and Google’s Android 5.0. Many of these features can be found on earlier versions of these operating systems. The workshops also include hands-on training, allowing attendees to ask questions about their own phones or use the latest versions of new phones. In 2014, the Wireless RERC and AT&T held 17 workshops in six cities and reached more than 450 people. In 2015, with the second grant, the team hopes to visit 10 cities and reach more than 2,000 people. Cities scheduled so far include San Diego, Los Angeles, Phoenix, New York, Dallas and Austin. For updates, visit wirelessrerc.org. Sara Baxter A former Shepherd Center patient tests accessibility features on a tablet at a workshop sponsored by the Wireless RERC and AT&T. Shepherd Center Radio Launches with Series of Podcasts Shepherd Center Radio has launched its first series of 10-minute podcasts discussing topics such as injury prevention, the latest developments in spinal cord injury research, healthy living after a stroke and the latest treatments for chronic back pain. Each podcast features a Shepherd Center expert. The topics for the podcast were chosen based on questions received from Shepherd Center patients. All podcasts are available for listening or downloading at shepherd.org/radio. A transcript of each interview is also available on the Shepherd Center Radio web page. In addition, the podcasts are available on iTunes and iHeart Radio. Available at shepherd.org/radio. 2 • news.shepherd.org Research Director Honored with Two National Physical Therapy Awards The American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) Section on Research has announced that Edelle Field-Fote, PT, Ph.D., FAPTA, (left) Shepherd Center’s director of spinal cord injury research, is the recipient of the 2015 John P. Maley Award for her long-time leadership in physical therapy research. Also, the APTA announced it is recognizing Dr. Field-Fote with this year’s Neurology Section Award for Excellence in Research. This award acknowledges and honors continuing excellence in research related to neurologic physical therapy science, theory, practice or education. “Because the population of people with spinal cord injury is relatively small compared to other clinical populations [such as the stroke population, for example], research in this area often doesn’t receive a great deal of attention. For this reason, these awards are especially meaningful to me,” said Dr. Field-Fote, who accepted the awards at the APTA Combined Sections Meeting on Feb. 6. “Having served as an officer in both the Section on Research and the Neurology Section, these groups have a very special place in my heart. Both Sections have long had strong commitments to the advancement of evidence-based practice in physical therapy, and to have my colleagues in both these Sections recognize my work – in the same year – is a real thrill.” Dr. Field-Fote has contributed to the research foundations of clinical practice in numerous ways, the APTA noted. She has been principal investigator on several National Institutes of Health research grants and a co-investigator or collaborator on numerous other projects. She has published more than 40 peerreviewed articles and is the author/editor of a widely respected textbook on spinal cord injury rehabilitation. “Beyond her individual contributions, what truly sets Dr. Field-Fote apart is the impact she has had on neurologic physical therapy research in general,” the APTA added. “As editor-in-chief of the Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy (JNPT), she has had a tremendous positive impact on the application of research findings to clinical practice. Dr. Field-Fote became the director of spinal cord injury research at Shepherd Center in May 2014. For the past two decades, she was the director of the Neuromotor Rehabilitation Research Laboratory at the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis. She has a bachelor’s degree in physical therapy from the University of Miami, a master’s degree in environmental health and safety from the University of Miami, a doctorate in movement science from Washington University in St. Louis and a post-doctoral fellowship in motor control physiology from the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis. Dr. Field-Fote’s research has focused on restoring walking and hand function after spinal cord injury by making maximal use of spinal pathways not damaged by injury. Read more online at http://bit.ly/1OvEpJ6. ADA Legacy Tour Makes Stops in Atlanta To commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) on July 26, 2015, the ADA Legacy Tour bus has been traveling across the United States to raise awareness about the ADA and pay tribute to the crossdisability efforts that led to the passage of the ADA in 1990. Since kicking off the tour in July 2014 in Houston, the bus has traveled more than 11,500 miles to 18 states. Wrapped in photos from before the signing of the ADA as well as of the signing itself, the bus also contains several history related displays and a handmade quilt. “I personally believe we’ve all benefitted from this law, not just those with disabilities,” says Mark Johnson, Shepherd Center’s director of advocacy and chairman of the ADA Legacy Project. “By taking part in the tour, people will have an opportunity to learn about the history and legacy of the ADA.” For more information about the Legacy Project and the 25th Anniversary, visit adalegacy.com. Sara Baxter Shepherd Center staff members pose with the ADA Legacy Tour bus. Atlanta dates May 10 Evening reception at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights (NCCHR), part of the National ADA Symposium | adasymposium.org May 15-16 Mobility Expo – North Atlanta Trade Center | themobilityexpo.com June 12 Shepherd Center | news.shepherd.org June 13 ADA25 Festival at NCCHR, part of the Society for Disability Studies Conference – Hyatt Regency Atlanta | disstudies.org These events are open to anyone who would like to see the bus. Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 3 R research Eyeing the Future of Wearable Technology Remembering important tasks or recent interactions with people can be a challenge for anybody. For people recovering from and living with the effects of a brain injury, these everyday tasks can be even more difficult. That’s why clinicians at Shepherd Pathways, Shepherd Center’s post-acute brain injury rehabilitation program, often teach patients how to use tools and techniques for aiding memory. These tools include common consumer devices such as cell phones and tablets. Building on these clinical practices, a research and development team at Shepherd Center has recently developed its own memory application (“app”) called EyeRemember, which runs on a wearable device called Google Glass. Researchers have begun testing the app, gathering helpful feedback from patients with brain injury, as well as their caregivers and therapists. The research team’s three members are part of the Glass Explorer program, and include clinical research scientist John Morris, Ph.D., speech-language pathologist Tracey Wallace, MA, CCC-SLP, and Android developer Scott Bradshaw, BSCS. The project is being funded by a Glass Accessibility Award the team received from Google in 2014. EyeRemember helps people with memory difficulties keep track of people in their circle – family, friends, therapy team members and possibly others with whom the user interacts on a regular basis. The EyeRemember app works in conjunction with Bluetooth low-energy (BLE) beacons – small transmitters about the size of a car key fob – that must be worn or carried by friends, family, Video and extended article online at news.shepherd.org 4 • news.shepherd.org therapists and others in the user’s community. The app uses the Bluetooth capabilities built into Glass to regularly scan for other BLE beacons in the vicinity. The user, or user’s caregiver, must first assign a beacon to individuals in the user’s circle. When the user gives the command for EyeRemember to create a new contact, the app initiates a scan of BLE beacons in the vicinity. When one is detected, it offers the user the opportunity to attach contact information to the beacon by entering a name, relationship information and a photo. After the user creates the contact, he or she can add notes about that person, or possibly things the user wants to tell that person. The next time the beacon for an individual contact enters the vicinity of the Glass wearer, the beacon will be identified by the EyeRemember app. The contact information “card” for that individual will appear automatically on Glass, showing a photo, name and relationship for the contact. The user can then select that card to view existing notes or add new ones. “EyeRemember is still in the testing phase. So far, clinicians and patients have been very receptive to the prototype. But, we’re still assessing the app’s effectiveness as a memory aid,” says Wallace, who is leading the clinical evaluation of the app. Google announced in January 2015 that it was closing Explorer program and moving the Glass program from the experimental Google X Lab to become its own Google team. At that time, Google promised future versions of Glass. The current version of Glass is still being sold to certified partners – companies in healthcare, manufacturing and other industries whose workers need hands-free access to information – in the Glass at Work program. “We’re committed to going forward with our research and development efforts on Glass,” Dr. Morris says. “We are beginning to gather important data on app interfaces for wearable displays – whether on Glass or watches or wrist bands – for people with brain injury and their clinicians, especially for memory remediation. And, we think that Glass-like wearable hardware worn on the head is likely to mature rapidly into a robust consumer technology.” To read more about EyeRemember and to see how it works, visit, http://bit.ly/1CtqwX4. Researchers at Shepherd Center are testing a memory app for Google Glass called EyeRemember, which is intended to help people with brain injury. Photo by Louie Favorite Shepherd Center researchers are testing a memory app for Google Glass and other wearable technologies. P staff profile Teresa Ashman, Ph.D., ABPP-Rp, FACRM Director of Neurorehabilitation Psychology Interviewed by Phillip Jordan Teresa Ashman, Ph.D., is a rehabilitation psychologist who has been with Shepherd Center since July 2013. As director of Neurorehabilitation Psychology Services, she treats all outpatients with neurological conditions and conducts clinical research with people who have sustained traumatic brain injuries. INTERESTING FACTS Experience: Teresa Ashman, Ph.D., is a rehabilitation psychologist who treats patients in Shepherd Center’s outpatient clinics. Photo by Louie Favorite Q:Describe what you do in your specific area of research. A:T he majority has been in the area of traumatic brain injuries, with much of my research being clinical research: Determining which interventions are most effective, looking at ways to improve cognitive functioning, and addressing depression and anxiety post-injury. I like doing hands-on clinical research because it directly impacts patients at the same time the researcher is learning. Q:What’s one of the most important things you’ve learned in your work so far? A:T he one big thing I always want patients to remember is this: While we certainly see the most rapid and steep recovery in the first six months after an injury, people can continue to improve and recover long after that – particularly if we keep developing new treatments or strategies. Longer-term physical gains not only benefit patients physically, but they can also improve attitudes and outlooks. Q:What’s your approach to interacting with patients? A:I like to be direct. It’s important to lay out what the purpose of a session might be, or, when conducting neuropsychological testing, to explain the purpose of the evaluation. My goal is to get patients to tell me their story. I also like to be honest while assessing their current strengths and weaknesses. My philosophy is to treat patients as capable, thinking individuals who should be actively involved in their own treatment. Even if their judgment might be impaired to a varying degree due to a traumatic brain injury, it’s vital that they feel a sense of ownership in their recovery. Q:How would you describe yourself? A:I’m not afraid to speak my mind! I tend to be a little bit no-nonsense. I grew up in Savannah, but having worked and lived in New York for so many years, I think I’ve become a little more blunt. So it’s a bit harder to hide my personality now! Like a lot of people with more than one degree, I’d say I’m definitely a chronic learner, too. There’s always more to know! •F ormer Director of Psychological Research, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at New York University’s Langone Medical Center • Former Director of Postdoctoral Training at Mount Sinai Medical Center • Editorial Board, Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation • E xecutive Board of Andee’s Army • Member of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Psychological Association • Certified in rehabilitation psychology by the American Board of Professional Psychology Fellowships and Awards: Fellow of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine; Ted Weiss Advocacy Award; John G. Gianutsos Award; two-time recipient of the David Strauss Memorial Award Doctoral Degree: The New School, New York City (Doctorate in Clinical Psychology) Undergraduate and Master’s Degrees: Bard College, Annandaleon-Hudson, N.Y. (Clinical Psychology) Fun Fact: Biggest adjustment moving from New York City to Atlanta: “Driving! I didn’t even have a car for 20 years!” More online at news.shepherd.org Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 5 1 healing the Shepherd Center physicians take an individualized and intensive approach to rehabilitation care. By Amanda Crowe, MA, MPH 6 • news.shepherd.org Photo by Louie Favorite whole person Diane Barrineau of Ocala, Fla., set out on a weekend getaway with some friends in spring 2014. Just 30 minutes into their road trip, the driver lost consciousness, and from the backseat, Diane struggled to reach the steering wheel to keep the car from veering into some large oak trees. But it was too late. Upon impact, her seat belt snapped her backwards. “I knew when we came to rest on a big oak tree I was doomed. I couldn’t feel anything,” says Diane, who sustained an incomplete C-5 spinal cord injury (SCI). Initially treated at the University of Florida Health Shands Trauma Center, she was soon transferred to Shepherd Center for intensive rehabilitation. “We did our research, and it became very clear Shepherd was where I needed to be,” Diane says. Shepherd Center is known for its clinical expertise and innovative therapy, providing care for people who sustain spinal cord and traumatic brain injury, including the most complex cases. But as Diane attests, the supportive care offered at Shepherd goes far beyond the day-to-day management of patients’ injuries. The doctors and clinical teams get to know patients and families on a personal level, as well, often developing long-term relationships. Photo by Phil Skinner The Human Element of Clinical Care “The human element of our job is so important,” explains Anna Elmers, M.D., a Shepherd Center staff physiatrist who treated Diane. “We see patients at their lowest lows, and in many cases, we see them going back to school or work, getting married and living a meaningful life – sometimes achieving more than we would have ever expected.” After nine weeks at Shepherd Center, Diane was able to return home and within days was back to work running a land surveying company. “I’ve made tremendous progress, and the groundwork was laid at Shepherd Center,” says Diane, noting that the hospital continues to have an impact on her life. Diane’s therapy team took a special interest in helping her son Travis as he dealt with his mom’s injury. The team educated Travis about the injury. Now, he has so much confidence in Dr. Elmers that he consults with her to make sure his mom’s local therapy is on target. “We get to know people in a personal way and are able to see things from the family’s perspective,” says Dr. Elmers, who started as a resident at Shepherd Center in 2006. In 2009, she joined the medical staff full time as an attending physician with her own treatment team. “I couldn’t think of a more rewarding field.” The opportunity to help restore hope and independence to patients is also a motivating factor for Gerald Bilsky, M.D., a Shepherd Center physiatrist who has followed the progress of many of his patients during the 17 years he’s practiced at the hospital. Dr. Bilsky tells patients their life isn’t over after a brain or spinal cord injury. He recalls a patient he treated 15 years ago; he recently attended that patient’s wedding. Dr. Bilsky often receives pictures from patients of high school or college graduations, trips and everyday life. “That’s really cool,” Dr. Bilsky says. “There is a level of caring at Shepherd that is different than a typical hospital. There is something different here.” Andrew Dennison, M.D., another Shepherd Center physiatrist, agrees. “It’s spiritually rewarding for me to be able to go to work everyday and help people get through what is among the most difficult of situations,” he says. “T here is a level of caring at Shepherd Center that is different than a typical hospital. There is something different here.” – Gerald Bilsky, M.D. 2 1. Shepherd Center physiatrist Gerald Bilsky, M.D., works with Gregory Stoneman, of Richmond, Va., in the Day Program gym. 2. Caleb Rimes, of LaBelle, Fla., chats with Anna Elmers, M.D., outside a Shepherd Center therapy gym. Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 7 8 • news.shepherd.org were before their injury. “I try to be as openand honest as I can, providing hope, but also giving them a true understanding of what they are facing,” Dr. Dennison says. Staff physiatrist Ford Vox, M.D., notes, “Our cases are sometimes very tragic, but it’s rewarding to see recoveries, and that’s what keeps you going.” He recalls one patient who was barely able to communicate or move as an inpatient, but is now back at work full time. Shepherd Center’s caring and compassionate family atmosphere left the biggest impression on Diane. “My treatment team members had other patients to care for, but in my eyes, I was the only one they were focused on,” she says. “They had such patience and listened to every detail. So often when you talk to doctors, they are on one level and you’re on another, and – Diane Barrineau, Ocala, Fla. they can be unapproachable.” But she remembers fondly that whenever Dr. Elmers would see her in the hospital’s cafeteria, she would come up to her and ask how she was feeling. Continued on Page 10 Andrew Dennison, M.D., talks with patient Jeffery Folsmbee, of Snellville, Ga., in the Acquired Brain Injury Unit at Shepherd Center. Photo by Gary Meek Dr. Dennison treats people with brain injuries – often from blunt trauma or motor vehicle accidents – and was drawn to the field because it combines neurology and non-surgical orthopedics and because of the unmet need. “Not many people have the expertise or training to put all the pieces together,” he says. “These are patients with unique needs, and I’m afraid some could fall through the cracks without a good advocate.” Often, his job involves finding medical issues that might have been missed during the initial critical care treatment provided in a trauma center. Of course, because Dr. Dennison takes care of people during the acute phase of their brain injury rehabilitation, he says, “A lot of times, my patients are just starting to remember who I am before they leave the inpatient environment.” It’s why he tries to see patients beyond their injury and get to know who they “What a blessing it was for me to be at Shepherd Center.” Shepherd Center Physician ExPErtisE by thE numbErs Shepherd Center Staff phySiCianS 176 6 ConSulting phySiCianS 6 Shepherd Center Staff phySiCianS who treat people with Spinal Cord injury Shepherd Center Staff Physicians Who Treat People with Brain Injury 282 3 Shepherd Center Staff Physicians Who Treat People with Multiple Sclerosis ToTal # of years of experience among shepherd cenTer sTaff physicians it takeS a village Besides a physician, shepherd center clinical teams typically also consist of: a case manager, nurses, occupational therapist (oT), physical therapist (pT), speech/language pathologist (slp), therapeutic recreation specialist, psychologist and/or counselor, dietitian, chaplain, and in some cases, a respiratory therapist, neuropsychologist, rehabilitation technology specialists and assistive technology specialists. shepherd cenTer sTaff physicians who TreaT people wiTh chronic pain gerald Bilsky, m.d., and anna elmers, m.d., see both spinal cord and brain injury inpatients. angela Beninga, d.o., and rhonda Taubin, m.d., see both brain and spinal cord injury patients in the outpatient multi-specialty clinic. medical director donald peck leslie started at shepherd center as a resident in 1983 and was hired on staff in 1986. guy Buckle, m.d., mph, is shepherd center’s newest staff physician joining the andrew c. carlos ms institute in march 2014. 2 last year, shepherd center had 965 admissions to its spinal cord and brain inpatient programs and 571 to its day patient programs. in addition, shepherd sees more than 6,600 people annually on an outpatient basis. gerald Bilsky, m.d., and Brock Bowman, m.d., are the two longesttenured shepherd center staff physicians who regularly see patients. They have both been at shepherd for 17 years. Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 9 Because doctors at Shepherd Center treat such a high volume of patients, their expertise is second-to-none. For this reason, they are often sought after as a resource. “We get calls from doctors around the country asking basic questions about brain and spinal cord injury,” Dr. Elmers says. “What we do is so specialized that it’s not as intuitive to others.” The medical staff is so specialized, in fact, that Drs. Dennison and Vox are among the first physicians in the country – and only two of six in Georgia – to be certified in brain injury medicine. Drs. Dennison and Vox have both been asked to write questions for the exam that was initiated as a joint venture through the American Board of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology– part of a board certification that emerged out of a growing need for doctors with a certain level of expertise in treating brain injury. “It now really means something to call yourself a brain injury specialist,” Dr. Vox says. “This certification will undoubtedly help advance the field and benefit patients.” Erik Shaw, D.O., a physiatrist at the Shepherd Pain Institute, plays a specialized role, as well, treating chronic pain that often occurs due to an injury or degenerative disease. Like other Shepherd Center physicians, he works to help patients gain the highest possible quality of life and functional ability. “A lot of these patients don’t have many other places to go,” Dr. Shaw says. “Most of our patients have some level of pain, and that needs to be addressed. Here, we understand the different disease states, how they progress over time and what to watch for.” Unlike some other rehabilitation environments, Shepherd Center treats people early in their road to recovery. “We have expertise in very complex cases at very early stages of injury,” Dr. Vox says. “We will take semi-conscious patients who may be on a ventilator and still need a surgery or two – patients who at other centers would still be under the care of a trauma or critical care physician and losing valuable rehabilitation time.” Data consistently show better outcomes for traumatic injury patients who get an early start in individualized and intensive rehabilitation and therapy. “It’s to the patient’s advantage to get to rehabilitation sooner,” Dr. Vox says. “Many patients are treated on autopilot in an acute-care setting, but at Shepherd Center, we can anticipate and coordinate care, and focus on neurotrauma, too.” Teams at Shepherd Center take a holistic view in treating patients. They consider what medications may be good to use or omit, and when it makes sense to intervene with a procedure and other clinical options. Shepherd patients may receive care from an internist, neurosurgeon and rehabilitation physician. Consulting physicians further extend the variety of surgical and medical subspecialities available to patients to address any medical issues – nerve damage, leaks of brain fluid, etc. – that may arise. This helps avoid transfers back to an acute-care hospital and disruptions in rehabilitation. While there is a wealth of expertise at Shepherd Center, it’s the culture that sets the hospital apart, physicians say. “I tell patients it’s like going to Disneyland,” Dr. Elmers explains. “It can be very overwhelming at first, and there’s all this stuff you need to do and you don’t know where to start. But help is all around. And the staff is so happy – from therapists to technicians to the people picking up your lunch tray and cleaning your bathroom.” Humor and laughter are often part of the healing process. “We know what we are dealing with is serious stuff, but we don’t take ourselves too seriously,” Dr. Bilsky says. “We try to laugh and be creative in our approach. It doesn’t mitigate the nature of what we do, but most people don’t thrive on serious every minute. I think people want and thrive on normalcy. You have to be here to see it and feel it.” Shepherd Center physiatrist Ford Vox, M.D., is among the first doctors to be certified in brain injury medicine in the United States. 10 • news.shepherd.org Photo by Gary Meek Unparalleled Expertise in a Culture of Caring A Team Approach Of course, the doctors at Shepherd Center are only part of the integrated mosaic of care providers that are part of every patient’s experience. Treatment teams typically include nurses, therapists, a counselor, dietitian, exercise specialist and a case manager. “Our doctors have a lot of expertise, but what makes Shepherd Center so special is how the treatment team members work together,” Dr. Elmers says. “I’ve learned so much from the nurses and therapists.” Dr. Vox says the teams “work closely and well together, and we have a lot of tools at our disposal to be to treat patients and optimize their recovery.” Paying It Forward “We try to help patients be as independent as possible and push them to new heights, and they often pay it forward to friends, family and society,” Dr. Bilsky says. In fact, the mother of one of his patients, who is now married and living on the West Coast, returns to Shepherd Center every year to bring gift baskets and goodies to patients. Dr. Elmers notes that many nurses and therapists go the extra mile without expecting any recognition. She knows of staff members who have donated gift cards to patients in need. And many hospital staff members contribute to the hospital’s annual employee giving campaign. “The Shepherd family must be so proud of this incredible place they created,” Dr. Elmers adds. “We have a lot of expertise, but it’s the culture that sets us apart.” Shepherd Center Medical Director Shares His Ongoing Vision For the Hospital More online at news.shepherd.org By Amanda Crowe, MA, MPH Donald Peck Leslie, M.D., has been Shepherd Center’s medical director for the past 11 years and will soon celebrate his 32nd year at the hospital. “I’ve worked in virtually every division of this hospital from inpatient to outpatient,” Dr. Leslie says. “It’s not just a job; it’s a life. I love this place, and I love what happens here.” Over the past three decades, he has seen the hospital grow from a spinal cord injury rehabilitation center to a fully integrated care facility that now treats people with spinal cord and brain injury, multiple sclerosis (MS), stroke, and other neuromuscular and degenerative disorders. “When I started, we had 40 beds and maybe a couple hundred employees,” says Dr. Leslie, who also established the brain injury team. “Now, we have 152 beds and 1,600 people on staff.” Of course, as medical director, he has had a role in the hospital’s growth – not just its growing size, but also in building the respect and international recognition the hospital now commands. It’s also his job to assure Shepherd Center is equipped with the depth and breadth of expertise and specialized programs to continue to support patients’ needs and advance the hospital’s mission. Dr. Leslie oversees 173 staff and consulting doctors across various medical and surgical specialties, and their work goes well beyond their job description. “I’m proud of the very fine, experienced and well-trained physicians, many of whom have double – even triple – medical or surgical specialty boards,” he adds. “There is a level of dedication among all of our staff, and it’s paramount to our success.” But it’s not just about the day-to-day clinical care provided. Shepherd Center’s research program has expanded to study and help shape technologies and therapies that can be translated into the clinic, helping advance the field. For example, studies have included trials of robotic exoskeletal devices to help people walk; an intrathecal Baclofen pump that when implanted can help control muscle spasticity; and stem cell research in people with spinal cord injury. But what truly sets Shepherd apart, Dr. Leslie explains, is its culture of goodwill and collaboration. “In medical school, we are taught that the doctor is the top of the pyramid, but at Shepherd there is no pyramid,” he says. “We are all on the same level playing field, and you have to be a team player. That’s just the culture here.” Throughout his time at Shepherd, Dr. Leslie has embodied and promoted this team environment. But the real role models in Dr. Leslie’s eyes are Shepherd Center co-founders Alana and Harold Shepherd and their son James. James was injured while bodysurfing off the coast of Rio de Janeiro when he was just 22 years old. “When James sees patients and families on the floor, he’ll reassuringly say, ‘You can make it. I did.’” “Our mission statement is lived out every day here, and we always strive to give the very best care possible,” Dr. Leslie says. Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 11 Comprehensive for People with Care Multiple Sclerosis The Andrew C. Carlos Multiple Sclerosis Institute at Shepherd Center offers patients everything they need — all under one roof. By Sara Baxter “Dr. Buckle represents the perfect blend of competence, collegiality and compassion,” C. Carlos Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Institute at Dr. Thrower says. “His years of dedication to the Shepherd Center has been offering a comprehensive MS community and his respect from colleagues at a approach to treating MS, a disease of the central national level make him a most welcome addition to nervous system, which disrupts the flow of inforour team. We expect his expertise in neuroradiology mation between the brain and body. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society estimates neuroimmunology and collection of clinical outcomes data in MS will complement our team.” that MS affects more than 2.3 million people worldDr. Buckle’s expertise in neuroimaging — imaging wide. To help treat this often debilitating disease, of the brain and spinal cord done by computed the MS Institute at Shepherd Center offers a wide tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging range of services, including diagnosis, treatment, (MRI) — will be enhanced with the addition of a research, rehabilitation and counseling. new 3-Tesla MRI machine. The new machine, which “Multiple sclerosis is a complex disorder requiring will be installed in a new MRI suite will provide a team approach for best managing it,” says Ben twice the imaging capabilities of the current MRI Thrower, M.D., who has been medical director of machine. That will help with diagnosis and treatthe MS Institute since June 2001. “The goal of our ment options for people with MS. team is to offer comprehensive, compassionate, cutting-edge treatment to the person with MS.” The MS Institute offers a holistic approach to “There’s no other MS center that patient care — a sort of “one stop shopping” for I’m aware of that offers this focus those with MS. Aside from clinical care, patients or level of comprehensive care.” at the MS Institute can receive top-notch occupa – guy buckle, M.D., MPH tional and physical therapy, get seated for the proper wheelchair, take an exercise class designed just for them, and participate in support groups and field trips. “There’s no other MS center that I’m aware of that offers this focus or level of comprehensive care,” says Guy Buckle, M.D., MPH, who joined Shepherd Center’s team of neurologists in March 2014. “Most are focused on research and clinical treatment, but don’t have a rehabilitation component.” Dr. Buckle, who is now the director of neuroimaging research in the MS Institute, came to Shepherd after 20 years at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, where he was most recently the director of clinical care at the hospital’s Partners Multiple Sclerosis Center. He now works alongside Dr. Thrower and Sherrill Loring, M.D., who joined the team in 2008. Guy Buckle, M.D., MPH, joined Shepherd Center’s MS Institute in March 2014 as the director of neuroimaging research. 12 • news.shepherd.org Photo by Gary mEek Since its founding in 1991, the Andrew “The faster we can get people on medications to treat their MS, the better,” Dr. Buckle says. “We want to prevent the progression of the disease.” His research interest is in using neuroimagery — in this case MRI — to help predict the progression of MS. He explains that when the disease is in the progressive phase, many medications no longer work in slowing the disease. That’s where he’d like to see the MRI technology work. “Imaging in progressive MS is much more difficult,” Dr. Buckle says. “We need a predictive scan on who clearly has MS and who needs to be treated.” Dr. Buckle’s work will strengthen the MS Institute’s already-robust research program. Under the direction of Debbie Backus, PT, Ph.D., director of research in the MS Institute, the Institute is continuing cutting-edge research by joining a new research initiative (see sidebar) and adding new research elements to its wellness program. “Knowing that we provide the highest quality of MS care available…gives me great pride in being part of the MS Institute.” Photo by Gary Meek Sherrill Loring, M.D., treats MS patient Erica Taylor of Decatur, Ga., in the MS Institute at Shepherd Center. – Sherrill loring, M.D. “The strength of our research program is in our clinical focus,” Dr. Thrower says. “Shepherd Center focuses on the patient. While we do not do basic laboratory research, we have an excellent program that focuses on the testing of novel therapies, improving the safety of existing therapies, and, more recently, on rehabilitation and wellness in MS.” In 2012, Shepherd Center opened the Eula C. and Andrew C. Carlos MS Rehabilitation and Wellness Program. The program was the first in the nation to integrate all aspects of wellness — fitness, nutrition and education — into a single approach tailored specifically for people with MS. Components of the Wellness Program include: Individualized fitness assessments done by an exercise physiologist every six months pecialized classes in aquatic therapy, core S strength and agility/coordination, as well cardiovascular and lower-extremity exercises tate-of-the-art equipment for wellness S and rehabilitation S-specific educational classes on topics M such as nutrition, stress management, medication management and traveling with disabilities ield trips that help MS clients feel more F comfortable going out in the community The key to the program is that it is specific to people with MS. For example, those with the disease tend to get overheated more easily, so fans and ice vests are available in the classes to make it more comfortable and safer for clients to exercise. Classes are paced to meet their needs and smaller in size so each participant can be monitored more closely. While no cure is yet available for MS, new drugs and treatment therapies that decrease disease progression have emerged in the past several years. Shepherd Center’s neurologists are optimistic that someday they will be able to stop the progression of MS for every affected person and perhaps even reverse disability caused by the disease. In the meantime, the Andrew C. Carlos Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Institute at Shepherd Center will continue its mission to provide cutting-edge treatment and comprehensive care for people with MS. “I know of no other center, even at well-known academic institutions, that can rival the treatment that MS patients receive at the MS Institute at Shepherd Center,” Dr. Loring says. “Knowing that we provide the highest quality of MS care available, which derives in large part from the dedicated team of professionals we have, gives me great pride in being part of the MS Institute.” For more information about the Andrew C. Carlos MS Institute at Shepherd Center or to schedule an appointment, visit shepherd.org/ms. More online at news.shepherd.org Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 13 Advancing Research for Multiple Sclerosis By Sara Baxter Conducting research is part of the holistic approach to patient care that characterizes the Andrew C. Carlos Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Institute at Shepherd Center. Researchers at the MS Institute conduct studies and provide an opportunity for people with MS to participate in some of these investigations. Below is a list of ongoing studies that are recruiting participants: Impact of Massage Therapy on Fatigue, Pain and Spasticity in People with Multiple Sclerosis Assessment and Rehabilitation of Fitness to Drive in Individuals with Multiple Sclerosis his study is assessing the effectiveness T of massage therapy for decreasing fatigue, pain and spasticity in people with multiple sclerosis to improve their health perception and quality of life. In collaboration with Georgia Health Sciences University, this study aims to develop a systematic approach to developing a battery of tests that can be used clinically to accurately determine the fitness to drive of people with MS. Successful Employment and Quality Work-Life After Severe Disability — Comparison of Predictive Models with Multiple Sclerosis and Spinal Cord Injury Falls in Non-Community Ambulators and Wheelchair Users Shepherd Center is one of four research institutions participating in this study with the purpose of identifying characteristics associated with successful employment throughout the work-life cycle among people with physical disability resulting from MS. The study is comparing patterns of predictive factors with those identified in an independent study of spinal cord injury. “Multiple sclerosis is a complex disorder requiring a team approach for best managing it.” – Ben Thrower, M.D. A collaboration with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne, this study seeks to learn more about how often falls occur in people with MS who primarily use a wheelchair for mobility, as well as the potential causes are for these falls. Psychometric Properties of Outcome Measures for Mobility in People with MS This study is investigating how well walkingrelated outcome measures assess walking in people with MS. In addition, investigators are examining how well these walking measures are related to disability and the type of MS a person has. iConquerMS™ For more information on research at the Andrew C. Carlos MS Institute, visit shepherd.org/ research/multiple-sclerosis/current. Ben Thrower, M.D., has been the medical director of the Andrew C. Carlos MS Institute at Shepherd Center since 2001. 14 • news.shepherd.org Photo by Louie Favorite Shepherd Center is one of the sites for this national research project — from the Accelerated Cure Project — that enables people with MS to safely and securely contribute their health information and submit ideas for research on topics important to them. With the collection of this data, researchers will be able to see patterns and connections across a group, possibly leading to better diagnoses, improved treatments and even a cure someday. For more information, visit iconquerms.org. Massage May Provide Healing Relief for People with Multiple Sclerosis Researchers at Shepherd Center are gauging whether massage helps improve debilitating MS symptoms and quality of life. By Amanda Crowe, MA, MPH Photo by Dean Hesse Human touch can have a powerful effect on health, and research has found it may even promote healing. In fact, therapeutic massage is known to help relax muscles, enhance range of motion, improve blood flow and reduce stress. Researchers at Shepherd Center are investigating whether routine massage can help improve pain, spasticity and overall quality of life among people with multiple sclerosis (MS). This small study — one of the first to look at how massage might influence these measures in MS — will enroll 25 participants. Individuals will receive standardized massages — for the same amount of time, number of strokes and parts of the body worked on — for one hour a week for six weeks. “MS is a progressive disease, and the symptoms don’t go away,” says Deborah Backus, PT, Ph.D., director of MS research at Shepherd Center and the study’s principal investigator. “Many of the symptoms can actually exacerbate peoples’ disability and dramatically affect their quality of life.” Estimates indicate that 30 to 90 percent of people with MS report pain, and most (80 percent) have spasticity that is disruptive to everyday function, personal care and mobility. In this study, researchers are collecting and analyzing data from clinical tools and self-reported questionnaires to gauge changes in pain and spasticity levels, as well as quality-of-life measures both before and after massage. Shavonne Thurman, 39, of Atlanta, Ga., was among the first to sign up and participate in the study. Having completed her participation in the study, she now misses her weekly sessions during which massage therapists applied long strokes and light pressure — characteristic of Swedish-based massage techniques. “I’ve always had extreme tightness in my calves — so much so that it’s hard to think about anything else,” she says. “But during the massage, I was able to let that go and not think about my MS. It actually relaxed my legs so much, I had to sit for a minute before getting up because they were like jelly.” Shavonne was diagnosed with MS in 1999, and it has affected her life incredibly, she says. She walks with forearm crutches, but feels fortunate that she is still very active, can drive a car and is mentally sharp. Still, she is always hopeful for new therapies that will ease her pain and that of others with MS. While massage cannot cure MS, researchers say it holds promise to manage symptoms. “People are always looking for new ways to manage MS,” says Christine Manella, PT, LMT, therapy manager in Shepherd Center’s MS Institute. The beauty of massage is that it offers physical benefits, as well as mental and emotional upsides, too, Manella says. “During the massage, I was able to let that go and not think about my MS.” – Shavonne thurman “MS can be very stressful for patients because they don’t always know what’s coming next,” she adds. “This type of study helps us look at the whole person because a patient might be on the right medication and be physically fine based on [functional brain] MRIs, but if they are stressed out, it’s going to affect their health.” Through this study, researchers will be able to quantify any benefits of massage, show it does no harm in this population, and advance ongoing efforts to improve the health and wellness of people with MS. Not surprisingly, there’s been no shortage of interest for participation in the study, Dr. Backus says. While many health insurance plans will not cover massage for MS or other chronic diseases, studies like this one may pave the way for changes in the future. The one-year study is funded by the Massage Therapy Foundation. For more information, contact Christine Manella at Christine_Manella@Shepherd.org. Christine Manella, PT, LMT, therapy manager in Shepherd Center’s MS Institute, applies therapeutic massage techniques to a patient in the MS Institute. Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 15 Shepherd Center received a $65,000 grant from the California-based Craig H. Neilsen Foundation to fund a four-tiered program called “From Injury to Integration: Closing the Healthcare Gap.” Beyond Hospital Doors A new grant funds the opportunity to expand Shepherd Center’s mission. By Shawn Reeves 16 • news.shepherd.org Thanks to a new grant from the California-based Craig H. Neilsen Foundation, Shepherd Center will extend its mission beyond the hospital’s doors. Targeting individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI), the one-year grant totaling more than $65,000 will fund a four-tiered program called “From Injury to Integration: Closing the Healthcare Gap.” The program will help individuals and their home communities learn about and access resources that promote active, healthy lifestyles. “Shepherd Center already operates several health and wellness programs through Pro-Motion and Beyond Therapy®,” says Shari McDowell, director of the Spinal Cord Injury program at Shepherd Center. “These services have existed for a long time, but this grant allows us to look beyond our walls. When patients finish their time with Shepherd Center, we want to extend our support beyond that initial rehabilitation experience by helping them truly reintegrate into society and learn skills that will lead to healthier lifestyles.” Unfortunately, McDowell says, there often is a lack of health education, wellness programs and recreational activities in local communities for people with SCI. Yet people with SCI show an increased risk for early cardiovascular disease, which is also the leading cause of death for that population. This program’s tiered framework is designed to help mitigate this risk and overcome barriers to reintegration by educating individuals and communities on the importance of wellness programs tailored specifically to individuals with SCI. From Injury to Integration Closing the Healthcare Gap Four Components Health, Wellness and Leisure Expo This June 27, 2015 event at Shepherd Center will incorporate guest speakers, exhibit booths and demonstrations addressing topics such as nutrition and weight loss, blood pressure monitoring, exercise, women’s health, diabetes management, healthy skin care, emotional support, smoking cessation and respiratory health. It is open to the public, and the Neilsen Foundation grant will fund travel scholarships for 15 people with SCI who would benefit from participating in the expo. Photos by Donn Jones Train-the-Trainer Community Wellness Program Modeled after a successful Shepherd Center partnership with Delta Air Lines, this program component will engage other nonprofit organizations that promote health and fitness. Initial outreach will extend to local YMCA facilities, says Becky Washburn, Shepherd Center’s ProMotion and Beyond Therapy director. Shepherd Center staff members will visit fitness facilities to educate staff members there on SCI and its effects on physical mobility, as well as provide them with information on hardware and technologies that can contribute to heathy living. The first training session was held in March. Community-Based Health and Wellness Program Shepherd Center will host six community-based and wellness events – three in Greater Atlanta and three in the Southeast – to promote exercise and longterm health. This third tier seeks to raise awareness of risks such as obesity and hypertension, and offer hands-on recreation opportunities to mitigate those risks. Those opportunities include handcycling, tennis, softball and other activities at local recreation centers. The first community-based program was held at Shepherd Center in March, with others to follow throughout 2015. Community Re-entry and Accessibility Assessment Activities This component of the program will work with current or former Shepherd Center SCI patients to help assess, then eliminate, barriers for becoming – and staying – active. Specific activities include: • Visits to local fitness centers. •A ssistance in establishing an exercise program customized for the individual. •H ome visits that offer tailored home modification recommendations. More online at news.shepherd.org For more information on the “From Injury to Integration: Closing the Healthcare Gap” program, contact Spinal Cord Injury program director Shari McDowell at shari_mcdowell@shepherd.org or 404-350-7676. To sign up for any of the health and wellness clinics, visit shepherd.org/sci-clinics. Registration for the expo on June 27 and applications for scholarships for the expo and for community re-entry and accessibility assessment activities are also posted on shepherd.org. Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 17 1 Former patients share their insights on planning a wedding that is wheelchair accessible. Even as a young girl, Lauren Camdzic had very specific ideas about what her wedding day would be like. It would be a destination wedding, on a beach. Besides daydreaming about her future groom, the beach location was the most important part of Lauren’s early dreams. And she carried that romantic vision in her mind for years. “I had envisioned getting married at the beach ever since I started thinking about weddings,” Lauren says. “I couldn’t imagine it happening anywhere else.” But on a busy Friday afternoon in July 2011, Lauren was shot as she crossed a street in Midtown Atlanta, sustaining a T-10 spinal cord injury. The act of random violence changed her life in a way that could have shattered her oceanside wedding dream, were she not so strong and determined. Lauren spent months at Shepherd Center learning to adjust to life with a spinal cord injury. It was during those months that the boyfriend she had been dating since high school asked her to marry him. The answer, of course, was yes. Suddenly, Lauren found herself planning a wedding and thinking about that idyllic beach setting again. But this time she was thinking about how to make that dream come true amid new physical realities. “The beach is probably the least accessible place for a person in a wheelchair, but I couldn’t imagine it happening 18 • news.shepherd.org anywhere else. I was pretty determined. Luckily, we were able to pull it off,” she says. “Compromises are inevitable, but do not give up your dreams.” Lauren’s wedding involved a specially built ramp that led from the beach’s entry point down to where she and fiancé Anel exchanged vows, allowing her to comfortably navigate sandy terrain. The message and moral of Lauren’s story is an important one. Many of Shepherd Center’s patients are faced with the challenge of planning a wedding that includes some kind of special accommodations for accessibility. “Compromises are inevitable, but do not give up your dreams.” – Lauren Camdzic Finding a comfortable venue can be one of the most significant and obvious challenges. Is all of the terrain at a facility accessible, or just small portions of it? Where will the reception be held? Are dining tables tall enough to allow wheelchairs to slide under them? Photo by Amanda Eubank, Jubilee Photography By Mia Taylor Scott Keithley and his new wife Jean Manki looked at numerous venues, including historical homes, gardens and restaurants. Though he has C-7 quadriplegia that imposes accessibility requirements, Scott did not get discouraged during the search, but instead learned a great deal. “Many venues say they’re accessible on their websites or in their advertisements. But don’t take them at their word. It’s important to go see for yourself,” he says. “A lot of places figure if they don’t have a lot of stairs, then they are accessible, but they’re not thinking it all the way through.” When it comes to historical properties, there are often architectural challenges, Scott says. Because such sites often seek to preserve their original look, guests in wheelchairs are less likely to be able to access the entire property. Scott and his fiancé were also adamant about having tables that could comfortably be wheeled under, allowing guests to eat without having to balance a plate on their lap. Scott paid special attention to the seating arrangements, ensuring there was plenty of space between tables to circulate around the room. “You want to be able to get around and spend time with all of your guests,” he says. Ultimately, Scott and Jean chose a restaurant in a mixeduse office complex that had both indoor and outdoor seating, and an extensive courtyard. About 55 people attended. The entire affair lasted about five hours, with a DJ spinning tunes and music from Scott’s iPod. At one point, Scott’s new wife surprised him by singing “Make You Feel My Love” by Adele. “My vision was to be able to put together all of her friends and all of my friends – people who did not know each other, but knew of each other – and to have a relaxed celebration of our love, with really great food. And I really felt we achieved that,” he says. “How can we make subtle adaptations to the structure of the wedding so no one is really focused on my wheelchair?” – Kelley Simoneaux For Kelley Simoneaux, who has a T-12 spinal cord injury, it was important that the day not be centered around her wheelchair. Achieving that goal required several thoughtful adjustments. “I didn’t want my husband to have to bend to give me our first kiss, those kinds of things,” she says. During the ceremony, Kelley’s groom, Bradlee, sat in a chair across from his bride, able to look her in the eye and lean over easily to kiss her. The couple also selected a very small wedding cake, so it would not tower over Kelley while the couple cut the first slice. “For us, it was about: ‘How can we make subtle adaptations to the structure of the wedding so no one is really focused on my wheelchair?’ And we were able to accomplish that. I enjoyed the day and everyone else did, too,” Kelley says. A fastidious planner, Liz Ouligian of Gainesville, Fla., had her wedding date and all its important details finalized. And then destiny intervened. During a drive home from Jacksonville, Fla., she and her fiancé were involved in a car accident that left Liz with a T-12 incomplete spinal cord injury. 2 The wedding had to be set aside – at least temporarily. “My first thought was I still wanted to keep my wedding date. I will be sitting down but still able to go to my wedding,” she says. “But about one month before my wedding date, I realized it just wasn’t 3 going to happen. I was so upset. I was so big on wedding planning and getting everything done. I had this date and all of the favors engraved with the date.” Canceling that original date, however, has given Liz time to address some important new questions – such as how to shop for a wedding dress in a wheelchair and how to make the dress look its best when being worn in a sitting position. There are experts at bridal shops who can help alter a dress, allowing it to look the way it should, Liz says. There are also changes that can be made to the wheelchair to protect the wedding gown. Liz has not yet rescheduled her wedding date. She is working to clear one last hurdle before she will allow herself to finalize a date again. Holding tight to her original wedding dreams, Liz wants to be able to walk down the aisle and to also share a first dance with her new husband, as well as a dance with her father. Making that happen has required her to work tirelessly to regain enough strength in her legs to walk with forearm crutches. “Once I complete one walk down the aisle on my own, then I will set a new date,” she says. “I’m just waiting to get to that point.” 1. Lauren Camdzic always dreamed of a beach destination wedding, and with lots of planning was able to make arrangements for a wheelchair-accessible beach ceremony. 2. Kelley Simoneaux says she was able to make several small adjustments to her wedding so the day wouldn’t be focused on her wheelchair. 3. Liz Ouligian had a wedding date set when she sustained a spinal cord injury in a car accident. She had to postpone her wedding, but staged a More online at rehearsal with her fiance and their families while news.shepherd.org she was in Shepherd Center’s Day Program. Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 19 P patient profile BEYOND BEYOND EXPECTATIONS EXPECTATIONS After being struck by a drunk driver, Billy Wilkerson overcame a severe brain injury to see life through a new lens. By Shawn Reeves 20 • news.shepherd.org 4 Photos by Brandon McCormick — Whitestone Motion Pictures yea rs ago, doctors everything fitting together in new ways. It’s definitely helped questioned whether me be a better husband and a better Dad.” Billy Wilkerson would ever Billy has gone so far as to share coffee with the man whose walk or talk again, says his wife Jill, while sitting drunken driving caused his pain in the first place. He has written on their front porch in Dacula, Ga. Today, nine surgeries parole letters on behalf of the still-incarcerated man and later, he is a certified fitness coach through CrossFit, a core harbors no ill will. “He was a kid who made a bad decision,” strengthening and conditioning program. He dead lifts Billy says. “Maybe his BMW even knocked some sense into me!” 325 pounds, professionally writes, sings and records music, “Billy’s always been the peacemaker in the family,” says Jill, wrestles his 4-year-old son, Dawson, and 7-year-old daughter, who met her husband in grade school and marked their sixth Evie, and does most other things he did before the accident. wedding anniversary watching doctors take him off the ventilator. That outcome, however, wasn’t always so clear. “He easily could’ve hated the driver, but investing all that On July 31, 2011, Billy and his best friend of 20 years had energy just takes away from your own life, so what’s the use?” just left a friendly card game in Decatur, Ga., when their car Billy hasn’t completely returned to life before the accident. was hit by a drunk driver, leaving both Billy and his friend Ron He doesn’t tour with a band or perform at venues like Nashville’s with severe traumatic brain injuries. The impact crushed Billy’s historic Ryman Auditorium the way he did before. He doesn’t face, snapped his forearm and thrust him into a coma for the drive with his kids in the car and takes several naps a day, next seven days. He spent 16 days in the Intensive Care Unit which he attributes to the chronic fatigue stemming from the at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta before transferring to injury. He also has navigated a choppy emotional sea coping Shepherd Center, where for the next month he underwent with the loss of his best friend, who remains in a persistent intensive rehabilitation. vegetative state only a couple “When I arrived, I couldn’t of miles from Billy. remember my son, couldn’t But Billy has recovered remember any songs, what far beyond expectations, day it was, how I had gotten says Jill, who pushed him there,” says Billy, a songwriter early on to resume his singing for the past 16 years. and songwriting – even with Then one day, at Jill’s a tracheostomy still firmly in urging, Billy started singing, place – because “songs are retrieving from some jumbled what you do.” space in his muddled brain Billy is glad to be where a single song – Amazing he is – present for his family, Grace. He sang every stanza. mentally strong and in the Completely. Clearly. Perfectly. best physical shape of his And through wired jaws – so life. And he’s grateful for the began Billy’s path to recovery. path that has led him home. Thanks to an intensive He and Jill have stayed 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily “The whole experience has been in touch with Shepherd Center, rehabilitation regimen – an evolution of watching my brain participating in a program physical therapy, speech reconstruct and re-perceive what that links them with area therapy and occupational is and isn’t important in life.” middle schools, where they therapy – he progressed. But talk with students about billy wilkerson it wasn’t only his body and brain injuries. mind that improved, he says. “The first time we did it was His spirit improved, as well. two years after the accident,” “Shepherd Center actually helped design that part of Jill says of their involvement. “And we knew immediately is was me – that desire to create a new normal, the desire to keep something we’d continue doing.” pushing,” he says, “The energy there was just so different. “I enjoy telling my story – encouraging kids to do anything, I knew I was in a place that truly cared about the patient.” even with a brain injury – to live life,” Billy says. That level of care extended beyond Billy’s hospital room “I want to show them that it’s not so much the conflict in life, and into Shepherd Center’s on-campus housing, where his but how you react to the conflict that makes the difference.” family stayed so they could be close. “It brought so much peace knowing our family could be together,” Jill says. “Billy One-half of the duo called The Brothers Bright, Billy writes and sings was a stay-at-home Dad for three years before the accident, for Buford, Ga.-based Whitestone Motion Pictures. The Brothers Bright’s so it was really important for the kids to see him.” songs are available on iTunes, and one, “Blood on My Name,” was Since Billy’s discharge from Shepherd Center in 2011, recently featured in the post-Super Bowl episode of NBC’s “The Blacklist.” Evie and Dawson have watched their Dad return – physically, to be sure, but mentally and emotionally, as well, Billy says. Facing page: After sustaining a severe brain injury, “In some ways, the accident was a good reset button,” Billy Wilkerson credits his wife, family and closest friends (pictured) as part of the team that has helped he says. “The whole experience has been an evolution of him recover and continue with his life. Above: Billy’s Video and extended watching my brain reconstruct and re-perceive what is and wife, Jill, urged him to start singing again when he article online at isn’t important in life. Every day, I go outside and say ‘thanks’ was an inpatient at Shepherd Center’s Acquired Brain news.shepherd.org for waking me up. It’s interesting how you start to see Injury Program. Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 21 A alumni profiles Shepherd Alums: Where Are They Now? By Phillip Jordan Jeff Ledbetter Muscle Shoals, Ala. Fifteen years have passed since Jeff Ledbetter, 49, of Muscle Shoals, Ala., spent nearly three months at Shepherd Center. A motorcycle accident had caused a T-5 to -6 spinal cord injury, a collapsed lung and a blood clot in his brain. “The biggest thing I remember about Shepherd Center is that nobody thought you needed to be handled like a baby,” Jeff says. “They didn’t cut you any slack. I appreciated that and, really, I needed that.” There were times that Jeff laughed at what his physical therapists told him he was going to accomplish. “Sometimes I’d just think, ‘Are you crazy?’” he says with a laugh. “But they’d get me there. I think a whole lot of everyone there. They really taught me how to take care of myself again.” Jeff also cites the support of his family, particularly his wife Connie. “She’s been extraordinary,” Jeff says. “She’s done so many things for me. Honestly, I don’t know if I could have done it if it was the other way around. She’s pretty special.” Twelve weeks after his injury, Jeff returned to his job at a north Alabama manufacturing plant. When the plant shut down in 2004, he found himself out of work. Jeff didn’t stay down long. He used disability funds provided by the state of Alabama to pursue a bachelor’s degree in business management, graduating in 2008. In 2007, he took a part-time job with a flooring manufacturer in Tuscumbia, Ala., while finishing his degree. The gig led to a full-time job there, and for the past three years Jeff has served as the company’s manager of human resources. Even more important to Jeff is the spiritual perspective he’s gained over the past 15 years. “I wouldn’t trade anything for what God’s done in my life,” Jeff says. “And not just with work or family. My injury was a wake-up call. It took a pretty good kick in the pants to realize the mercy I’ve been shown, but the biggest change for me is that God used all this to save me.” 1 22 • news.shepherd.org Jeff Ledbetter was a patient at Shepherd Center 15 years ago after sustaining a spinal cord injury in a motorcycle accident. Since then, he has earned his bachelor’s degree and works full time in human resources. After a motorcycle accident that nearly ended his life, Ignacio Montoya returned to school, earned his bachelor’s degree and is now considering graduate school. 2 Ignacio Montoya Duluth, Ga. Ignacio Montoya, 24, of Duluth, Ga., had twin motivations for becoming a U.S. Air Force fighter pilot: to fly something very fast and to give back to the country that welcomed him as a 7-year-old Cuban immigrant. By December 2012, Ignacio’s goal stood within reach. He was completing his business studies at Georgia State University and finishing his time in the U.S. Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps at Georgia Tech. Ignacio had already earned a rated pilot slot, and was three short months away from his commissioning. Then on Dec. 4, 2012, Ignacio’s life nearly ended. He was in uniform, riding his motorcycle home from an ROTC change-of-command ceremony at Georgia Tech, when he was struck by a minivan. For 15 minutes, Ignacio remained pulseless, in cardiopulmonary arrest. Chest compressions and several rounds of epinephrine to the heart resuscitated him, but Ignacio sustained a T-4 to -5 complete spinal cord injury, a traumatic brain injury and an injury that severed the nerves connecting his right arm to his spinal cord. Ignacio spent several months at Shepherd Center in early 2013, and returns when possible for outpatient physical therapy and to use the ProMotion Fitness Center. When he was discharged from Shepherd Center, Ignacio immediately maneuvered his way, by wheelchair, to Georgia State’s campus, about six miles away. “It was important to me to get back on track right away,” he says. Today, Ignacio has his bachelor’s degree, lives on his own and is considering graduate school. He’s also fighting to change laws that prevent him from receiving medical benefits from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. “I was going through the same program as cadets at the Air Force Academy,” Ignacio says. “If I had been at the Academy, I would be eligible for benefits. However, cadets training in the exact same programs at other schools, like me, aren’t eligible for the same benefits.” For now, he’s fundraising for his medical expenses and keeping long-term goals in sight. “If I was dead for 15 minutes and got a second shot at life, I’m surely not going to spend it being complacent,” he says. Jordan McGee is back working full time after sustaining a brain injury in a car accident in December 2013. He says he now has a new, more positive approach to life following his rehabilitation at Shepherd Center. Sheri Denkensohn Arlington, Va. Sheri Denkensohn, 47, of Arlington, Va., was 16 years old when injuries in a diving accident resulted in quadriplegia. Nothing, however, stopped Sheri from moving to the nation’s capital, earning a law degree and becoming an attorney for the federal government. She’s spent the past 17 years working in the Inspector General’s office with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and is currently a senior advisor for Public Health Oversight. In 2009, Sheri sought out Shepherd Center for surgeries on two pressure-sore wounds. Post-operative complications kept her at the hospital for six months, much of it spent in Shepherd Center’s Intensive Care Unit. “I was intubated and on a ventilator most of my time there, and never thought I’d be able to go back to work. But I did! I’m thankful everyone at Shepherd knows how to be both tough and supportive.” Sheri also appreciated that Shepherd Center provided an on-campus apartment for her husband, Tony, who has Friedreich’s Ataxia, a progressive, neurological disorder that affects his balance and muscle coordination. The apartment allowed him to more easily support his wife while she was an inpatient. Tony and Sheri met through their mutual work with the ENDependence Center of Northern Virginia, where Tony served as a peer mentor and Sheri served on the board. When Tony asked her out on a first date, Sheri knew she had a potential keeper; the invite was to a Georgetown Hoyas basketball game. “I was an athlete growing up and I loved the Hoyas,” Sheri says. “It’s also where I went to law school, so yes, that was a good call on a first date.” The two have been together – and Georgetown season-ticket holders – for more than a decade. Sheri and Tony have joined forces to create Happy on Wheels (happyonwheels.com), an entrepreneurial business initiative focused on helping wheelchair users, and all individuals, to live happier lives. Sheri is the writer and speaker, while Tony serves as editor, web designer and social media guru. “We love spending time together,” Sheri says, “so this is a really fun chance to bring our strengths together for a shared purpose.” 3 Sheri Denkensohn spent nearly six months in Shepherd Center’s ICU in 2009 following complications from surgery for two pressure wounds. She is now back to her busy life in Arlington, Va., working full time and writing a blog focused on helping wheelchair users live happier lives. 4 Jordan McGee Charlotte, N.C. Before his car accident in December 2013, Jordan McGee, 25, of Charlotte, N.C., worked 50 to 70 hours a week as manager of a high-end women’s clothing store. “My life was my job,” he says. “To go from that to not being able to work at all, it was difficult to come to terms with.” Jordan sustained a traumatic brain injury in the accident. At times during his stay at Shepherd Center, Jordan remembers sitting up in his bed, yelling: “I don’t have time for this! I have work to do!” He eventually came to embrace his situation with newfound patience. “It surprised me,” Jordan says. “The emotional and intellectual development that has come with this has been priceless. I wouldn’t be living as wholly or happily as I am without the perspective this experience has brought.” Rapid improvement with occupational, physical and speech therapies allowed Jordan to go home in mid-March 2014, three months earlier than estimated. “I had the most incredible and encouraging rehabilitation staff,” he says. “I owe them my ability to speak and walk as well as I do. My daily function is a direct result of the successes they made possible.” Back home in Charlotte, Jordan incrementally worked his way back to full-time employment at his job. He discovered he enjoyed the rest of his life more, too. Jordan credits that to his new approach to life, developed at Shepherd Center, as well as the support of his family, his partner Chris and his best friend Jo. “The endless support I felt from Jo – who drove from Charlotte to Atlanta on a weekly basis – and the emotional and physical encouragement of my family were critical to my recovery,” Jordan says. “Without them, I’m not sure I would have been able to meet, much less fall in love with, the man of my dreams.” His continued growth includes volunteer projects, and work with the Charlotte chapter of the Brain Injury Association of North Carolina. “I have a simple mantra now: ‘Be kind, be honest, be compassionate,’” Jordan says. “I don’t have the time or tolerance to be otherwise!” More online at news.shepherd.org Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 23 Notes from scott h. sikes hepherd Center Foundation S Executive Director 25An Integral Part of Treatment 26 Staff profile 27 Donor profile 28 Calendar of Events 30 HONORARIUMS 35 MEMORIALS 24 • news.shepherd.org It is spring, and that means the dogwood trees are in bloom in Atlanta. If you have not been to our city in April, then you must make plans to be here. It is beautiful – particularly with the profusion of azaleas and dogwoods in bloom. Unfortunately, many people make their first trip to Atlanta as our patient, family member or loved one. Patients seek out Shepherd Center from across the country because of the comprehensive care we provide. It goes beyond the expert medical care mentioned in this issue of Spinal Column magazine, and includes numerous programs and services focused on the quality of life after injury. These 22 quality-of-life programs and services are critical to the recovery of our patients, but they are either unfunded or underfunded by traditional payers – insurance providers, workers compensation, Medicaid or Medicare. These programs include assistive technology, chaplaincy (featured on page 25), family housing, recreation therapy, the SHARE Military Initiative, vocational programs and much more. Each year, Shepherd Center Foundation must raise $8 million in donations to fund these vital programs. Some of this money is given by private foundations and corporations, but the majority is given by individuals. Whether they have a personal experience or connection with a patient, or an ardent belief in our mission, our donors give because they see the impact these programs can have on our patients’ lives. This issue of Shepherd Center’s magazine includes an article on the Alias family and their donations and volunteerism throughout the years – particularly their support of the Chaplaincy Program (see page 27). We also discuss the great work of our doctors in the Andrew C. Carlos MS Institute (see page 12), which has been made possible by generous donations and volunteerism from the Carlos family. It is my privilege to work with family members as they volunteer and donate in significant ways to help others. You can make a difference by giving amounts small or large to a specific program. Or, if you want to support all of Shepherd Center’s 22 quality-of-life programs, you may give to the Shepherd Fund. Just call me at 404-350-7305 or email me at scott_sikes@shepherd.org. In addition, you can give online at give.shepherd.org. Thank you. An Integral Part of Treatment Shepherd Center’s Chaplaincy Program offers faith for people of all religions. By John Christensen Photos by Louie Favorite 1 2 Tucked away in a corner of the original section of Shepherd Center is a small, carpeted room with muted lighting, a handful of chairs and an elaborate stained glass window. It is the chapel, a peaceful place where patients, families and staff members pray and meditate. Although the hospital’s mission is to help patients heal spiritually, as well as physically and emotionally, chaplains Ben Rose and Alan Roof say the chapel is under-utilized. “I think it’s under-used because it’s a dark space and not as warm and welcoming as it could be,” Ben says. “Also, most of the hospital is in the Marcus-Woodruff Building now, and we’re off in a corner.” That should change this year when the chapel is renovated with funds contributed by donors. A wall separating the chapel from the chaplains’ cramped office will be removed. Temperature control and lighting will be improved, and the stained glass window will be moved to a side wall, where it will be backlit. The chaplains’ new office will be smaller, but it will be at one end of the chapel where it is more convenient. “When people seek solace in the chapel, we’re just a doorknock away,” Ben says. Many larger hospitals have only one chaplain, and rural hospitals often rely on a minister from a local church. But Shepherd Center’s chaplains are an integral part of health care. They participate in meetings, confer with doctors and therapists, and meet frequently with patients and their families. “We have deep, hard conversations every day with patients who are asking hard questions, the ones that don’t have easy answers,” Alan says. “People have faith that they will walk again, and when they can’t, they wonder why God hates them. We’re not just about the wounds of the body; we’re also about the wounds of the spirit.” “A big part of what we do is sitting with folks,” Ben says. “We will pray with them that they will be healed, but beyond that, we expand the hope that they will truly live again.” The chapel is busiest in the early morning when some hospital employees stop by before going to work. In the evenings, it becomes a haven for patients and families who have trouble sleeping. The chaplains also preside over a worship service at 1:30 p.m. on Sundays in the Callaway Auditorium. The service includes scripture or poems, prayer, a homily, and live or recorded music. “We have singing, and we’ve even had interpretative dance by people in wheelchairs moving their arms,” Ben says. “There wasn’t a dry eye in the room.” “We’re not just about the wounds of the body; we’re also about the wounds of the spirit.” – Alan Roof Patients are also encouraged to participate in the service. Those with brain injuries may practice a prayer or poem with their therapist and recite it during the service. “We try to incorporate it as part of their therapy,” Alan says. The services are general in nature so people of all faiths are comfortable. “We may have Catholics from Boston along with Pentecostals from the South,” Alan says. “Usually, we have a bunch of gracious people who find they can sit next to people from other traditions and worship with them.” “We want people to be spiritually fed here, but we’re not trying to impose anything on them,” Ben says. “For some, that may mean going out to the garden instead, and we celebrate that, too.” For more information on Shepherd Center’s Chaplaincy Program, visit shepherd.org/chaplaincy. 1. Alan Roof speaks with the mother of a Shepherd Center patient in the Secret Garden. 2. Ben Rose talks with a patient during his daily visit to Shepherd Center’s Spinal Cord Injury Unit. More online at news.shepherd.org Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 25 p staff profile Shepherd Center Chaplains Tend to Spiritual Needs of Patients, Families and Staff Members By John Christensen patients come back, and we see how they’re doing in their new lives.” Chaplains attend seminary school, undergo three years of additional pastoral care education and do a residency in a hospital or prison. Unlike ministers who have congregations and specific beliefs, chaplains generalize to accommodate people of every faith. “In a church setting, you have to be narrower in your approach,” Alan says. “I’m more open-minded and entertain different ideas. It’s making spirituality work on a day-to-day basis.” “I talk with them about their journey without repercussions or judgment. Whatever they want to talk about, I’ll listen.” Shepherd Center chaplains Alan Roof (left) and Ben Rose (right) say their job is to listen to patients and learn who they are as people. More online at news.shepherd.org 26 • news.shepherd.org While doing his residency at an Atlanta hospital several years ago, Ben Rose walked into a patient’s room and introduced himself as a chaplain. The woman began screaming. “She thought I was the angel of death,” says Ben, now one of the two chaplains at Shepherd Center. “People make a lot of assumptions about us,” says Alan Roof, the other chaplain at Shepherd Center. “They think we’re just here to pray or show up at the time of death. That’s not what we’re about. We want to see who you are and how you are.” The chaplains at Shepherd Center not only tend to the spiritual needs of patients and their families, but also minister to staff members. In one case they conducted a service for a beloved service dog that died. Alan, 51, grew up in Colorado and had a career in hospital information technology before coming to Shepherd Center eight and a half years ago. When he was in college, Alan’s brother died and he met a hospital chaplain. “I thought that was such a cool job, helping people who need to talk and get help,” Alan says. “You don’t have to be a great theologian to help people.” Ben, 35, is from Maryland’s eastern shore. He was pastor of a church and a hospice chaplain before coming to Shepherd Center four years ago. “I enjoyed hospice care because you see someone’s journey and help with grieving,” he says. “But I love working at Shepherd because – Alan Roof With patients and families at Shepherd Center experiencing pain, shock and fear, the chaplains work in what Alan calls an atmosphere of “collective grief.” “The challenge early on is that the injuries can be so bad,” Ben says. “There’s the loss of the world as it was supposed to be, and everything feels profane. Talking with patients and their families about things like this is very serious. It’s difficult stuff. It really is an honor to be with folks in that sacred time.” Alan’s duties include working with wounded service men, women and veterans in the SHARE Military Initiative and helping them see how their new life can be good as well as different. “I talk with them about their journey without repercussions or judgment,” he says. “Whatever they want to talk about, I’ll listen.” However, they do not proselytize or make promises, and they avoid ready-made explanations. “We don’t try to change people,” Ben says. “We help them redefine things so they can see their new activities as spiritual practice. It’s experiential learning for them and for us. Every day is different.” Alan says, “When someone asks me why something happens, I’ll say, ‘I don’t know. Let’s look at that. Tell me what you’re thinking.’ We don’t have the answer. We usually have a lot of questions. When people’s lives have been torn apart, we try to help make their faith work for them. We’re the mechanics of the religious world.” Photo by Louie Favorite Donor profile d A Family Affair Fred, Shaler and Andrew Alias are longtime supporters of Shepherd Center. Photo by Louie Favorite By Sara Baxter When Shepherd Center co-founder Al ana Shepherd asked Fred Alias to have lunch with her at the hospital 30 years ago, he had a preconceived idea that it would be a “depressing place” given the patients’ circumstances. Instead, he had the opposite experience. “After I got in my car, I just felt exhilarated and positive,” recalls Fred, who has spent his entire career in the hotel business and is now CEO of Sandcastle Resorts. “To see the interaction with the patients and the staff was phenomenal. I saw more ‘high fives’ that day than I’d see at a Falcons game.” He calls that lunch “inspirational” and has been supporting Shepherd Center – both financially and by serving on the Board of Directors – ever since. In 2006, Fred established the “Employee Best Attitude Award” given to four Shepherd employees each year. The recipients are voted upon by their peers and receive a monetary gift. “Every employee at Shepherd has a great attitude, and I wanted to recognize that,” Fred says. Growing up, Shepherd Center was a “household name” to Fred’s sons, Shaler and Andrew. But Shaler did not see Shepherd Center in action until his best friend from college sustained a spinal cord injury in a fall off a roof the night before graduation. “That’s when I truly understood what Shepherd does,” Shaler recalls. “I saw every step of the process, from admission to therapy to discharge. I learned what a great place it really is.” As Shaler and Andrew established their careers – both work for an Atlanta company called Repay – they also began to support Shepherd Center. Aside from contributing financially, Shaler sits on the Shepherd Center Cup committee for the Shepherd Center Foundation’s annual golf tournament, chairing it once, and Andrew is on the hospital’s advisory board. “When you get involved at Shepherd, you get pulled into the thick of things because of the energy there,” Andrew says. “There’s no way to stay on the sidelines.” Shaler agrees. “Every time I walk out of Shepherd, I feel energized, and I want to be a part of it,” he explains. Fred and his sons have most recently made substantial contributions toward the renovation of Shepherd Center’s chapel, a project that is under way now. “We were looking for a way to honor Alana and Harold’s unwavering commitment to the Center,” Fred says. “Knowing their faith was important to them, the chapel was a perfect fit.” “God works miracles through Shepherd Center, and renovating the chapel is way to honor that,” Andrew adds. Long-time Shepherd Center donor Fred Alias with his sons Shaler and Andrew. “W hen you get involved at Shepherd, you get pulled into the thick of things because of the energy there. There’s no way to stay on the sidelines.” – Andrew Alias A quiet room – where patients and their families can meet with the chaplain away from their hospital room – is being added, and upgrades are being made to the chaplains’ offices and the chapel itself. The renovation includes the addition of antique pews and the relocation of a stained glass window. Fred calls his support of Shepherd Center a passion – and an easy one at that. “I feel it’s an honor and a privilege to help them,” he says. “It’s a very special place.” More online at news.shepherd.org Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 27 UPCOMING EVENTS 21 april 1 Auxiliary Luncheon & Annual Meeting SHEPHERD CENTER FOUNDATION Mark your 2015 calendar with the following Shepherd Center Foundation meetings and events. 19-26 APRIL Shepherd’s Men Run A group of military service members will run 911 miles, from New York City to Shepherd Center, to raise money for Shepherd Center’s SHARE Military Initiative. For more information visit, ShepherdsMen.com. 30 april Auxiliary Purse Sale 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Callaway Auditorium at Shepherd Center photo stream 1. A group of military service members train for their second Shepherd’s Men run. This year they will run 911 miles from New York City’s Ground Zero to Shepherd Center April 19–26 to raise money for Shepherd Center’s SHARE Military Initiative. For more information, visit ShepherdsMen.com. (Photo by Louie Favorite) Opposite page: Shepherd Center Society hosted the Big Game Bash on Feb. 1 at Bobby Jones Golf Course. Attendees included: 2. Taylor Weitz, Ashley French, Miller Jackson, Marisa Puckett, Sarah Baum, Svea Hall, Todd Stone 3. Malia Martin, Kirk Martin, Miller Jackson and Brandon Busbee 4. Griffin Baum and Sarah Baum 28 • news.shepherd.org 2 may 33rd Annual Derby Day at Chastain Horse Park Enjoy food, fun and fast horses! An Atlanta tradition since 1983, Derby Day, planned by Shepherd Center’s Junior Committee, is considered by many as the premier highlight of Atlanta’s spring social calendar. For more information, visit DerbyDay.com. 2 18 june Project Rollway Shepherd Center’s adolescent team will host its third annual fundraising fashion show. 3 2015 4 Save the Date July 15, 2015 Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 29 h Honorariums Honorees are listed first in bold print followed by the names of those making gifts in their honor. This list reflects gifts made to Shepherd Center between Nov. 1, 2014 and Jan. 31, 2015. Carol A. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Adams, Jr. Susan and Harve Bauguess Mr. and Mrs. Dale H. Tucker Joy and Bert Burns’ Friendship Ms. Ann R. Howell Kathy Adams John L. Lin, M.D. Eric Baum Mrs. Eric Baum Grace Catherine Devaux Byrne Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Byrne Patricia Ahlers Ms. Linda W. Alexander Grace Baumrind – Get Well Mr. and Mrs. Joel K. Isenberg Joanne Ainsworth Mrs. Harriet Robinson Natalie Beard Ms. Susanna Beard Casey Cabral – Thanks for excellence in Respiratory Therapy Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Christopher C. Akridge’s Recovery Mr. and Mrs. David McMahon Mary Beth Begley Ms. Katherine H. Crumley Sandy Alexander – Great Board Presentation Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Alan A. Behar Mrs. Sam Arogeti Tucker Anderson’s Recovery Sgt. Maj. Carter S. Lanier Jessica Andre Mr. and Mrs. Ed Andre Pete Anziano – Great Board Presentation Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Dr. David F. Apple for his service to the community Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Massey, Jr. Mike Arneson Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth V. Arneson Cyndae A. Arrendale Ms. Hong-Tsun Simon Mr. and Mrs. George W. Atkins, Jr. Wish Happy Holidays to: Mr. and Mrs. Steve Baldwin Mr. and Mrs. Charles Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Henry Grady Mrs. O. David Kulman Susannah and Ralph Smith Dr. and Mrs. Michael York Deborah Backus – Great job on data! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Stephen J. Ball Ms. Coleen Ball Mr. and Mr. Michael Balliet Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hall Julie J. Barrett’s Continued Recovery Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Barrett Mr. Jeff Bartusch and the staff at Federal Express Wish Merry Christmas to: Ms. Debbie Walker Ashley Bateman Col. and Mrs. George M. McVeigh, Jr. Brad Battaglia – Life-saving surgery Mr. and Mrs. James M. Kucera 30 • news.shepherd.org Mrs. Judith Belcher Wishes Happy Holiday to: The Vinson Family Mrs. John M. Bell Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. David Webster Mr. Austin Mayfield Mr. and Mrs. David Bennett Wish Happy Holidays to: Ms. Pat Ahlers Edith Bennett Higher Heights Fellowship Ministries Marla and Thomas Bennett Dr. Lynn Rogers Jennith Bernstein Dr. Gary Gruenhage Gary Billon Mr. Eugene Gannon Bonnie Blackwell Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Blackwell Helen Blasé Major General and Mrs. David R. Bockel, Sr. Eleanor Caldwell Mr. and Mrs. Robert Caldwell Ms. Shannon Caldwell Mr. and Mrs. Seth P. Richards Mr. and Mrs. James A. Carlos Wish Happy Holidays to: Ms. Angela Carlos Ms. Kari Carlos Sara and Donnie Chapman The Annie Oakley Shooters Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Herbert Sabrine Charif Dr. Anthony Cassandra Len Cherry – Expression of thanks Mr. Evan Flynn William Millard Choate Ms. Katie Choate Steve Clark Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Gray, Jr. Ms. Anne W. Clarke Wishes Happy Holidays to: Ms. Jeanette Clarke Mike Clarkin Mr. Patrick Ryan Warren Cleary – Great Board Presentation Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Michael L. Bliss Mr. and Mrs. Earl Repp Fletcher D. Cleaves, Jr.’s Recovery Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher D. Cleaves Cruise Bogle Mrs. Elizabeth Johnston Erin M. Cobb Ms. Lillian R. Shirley Mrs. Marjory Timothy and Mr. Bob Bollinger Wish Happy Holidays to: Jackie Samuels Shane P. Coco Mr. and Mrs. Dennis A. Coco Jacquelyn Breitenstein Ms. Barbara Linden Toni and Peter Brookner Mr. and Mrs. Adam R. Brookner Dylan Brown Mr. and Mrs. John G. Watson Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Buce Wish Happy Holidays to: Ms. Tricia Buce Joshua Craft’s Recovery Mr. and Mrs. Alton L. Craft Anita T. Crean Mr. and Mrs. John M. Crean James A. Curtis’ Birthday Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Ms. Debra K. Glidden James A. Curtis Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. Robert J. Bailey Ms. Joanne Bryant, AAMS Mr. and Mrs. Brad Courts Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Courts II Mrs. Carol MacDougall Curtis and Dr. W. Knox Kinlaw Ms. Laureen E. Dame Mr. and Mrs. Blake G. Dexter Mr. and Mrs. David Glass Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Hardage Ms. Sharon L. Hollis Dr. and Mrs. Knox Kinlaw Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lofthouse Mr. and Mrs. Jerome W. Lynn Mrs. Lindsay Mullin Mr. and Mrs. Todd Norwood Mr. and Mrs McKee Nunnally Mr. and Mrs Gary Pahler Mr. and Mrs. Dell B. Sikes Mr. and Mrs. Ian Smith Ms. Elizabeth Swanson Mr. and Mrs. David Withers Stanley Dale’s Recovery CMSGT. and Mrs. Marvin F. Dale, Ret. Betsy Daniels Mr. and Mrs. George K. Wolfes, Jr. Joe Daniels Mr. and Mrs. Corbitt Woods Ms. Suzanne Mott Dansby Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mrs. Grace H. Dansby Mr. Stewart Dansby, Jr. Ms. Susan Dansby Ms. Mallie Ireland Dr. Sally Ann Lynch Shawna and Cliff McDowell Ildiko Mulhaly Mr. and Mrs. Jarrett Davis Wish Happy Holidays to: Mr. Stockton Broome Mr. and Mrs. Brian Brown Mr. and Mrs. Allen Builder Mr. and Mrs. Merrell Calhoun Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Cook Mr. and Mrs. Hal Field Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Fry Mr. and Mrs. William Gow Mr. and Mrs. Hix Green Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hardin Mr. Jim Herndon Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Kemper Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Nease Mr. and Mrs. Rowland Radford Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sorenson Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Taratus Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Turner Mrs. Thomas Williams Mrs. William Waters Ms. Janet E. Dawson Wishes Happy Holidays to: Ms. Pat Ahlers Bobbie and Allen Dean Ms. Coker Appleton Nancy E. Delany’s Recovery Dr. and Mrs. Louis A. Riccardi Karen Devault Mr. Scott J. Keithley Karen DeVault – Great Board Presentation Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank K. Flautt Wish Happy Holidays to: Mr. Fred Alias Allison Dick The Martha and Wilton Looney Foundation, Inc. Sandra and David Flint Mr. and Mrs. Don H. Stenhouse Mike Dillon Ms. Amanda A. Daniel Ms. Mary Garcia Michele and Mike Dipetrillo Silicon Valley Foundation Nicholas Doeffinger Mr. and Mrs. Bob Doeffinger Samuel W. Dowlen’s Recovery Mr. and Mrs. Alex Whatley Ms. Mary Ann DuBose Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. Tom Sloope Cathi Dugger – Celebrating 15 years on the Adolescent Team Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Mrs. Caroline W. Fowler Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mrs. Joan Woodall William Fricks Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Fricks Mrs. Harold Fryer Mr. and Mrs. Dale H. Tucker Dr. and Mrs. Robert Fryer Mr. and Mrs. Dale H. Tucker Joe Gadd’s Recovery Lenore and Victor Maslia Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Cy Gamber Wish Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to: Cheryl and Jay Shanahan Patrick Durkin Ms. Susan L. Crawford Ann and Jim Gandy Wish Merry Christmas to: Mr. Andrew Cuppia Mr. and Mrs. James C. Cuppia Mr. and Mrs. Jerome C. Cuppia III Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Cuppia Mrs. Margaret Naugle Chuck Elander – Great job on data! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Chico Garcia Mr. Jack W. Riffle Scott Elliott Mr. and Mrs. Ronald H. Elliott Jeré V. Garde Ms. Jill Gregory Kathleen and David Ellis Mrs. Harriet Robinson Richard “Gip” Gayle – patient in 2003 and 2004 Mr. Franklin D. Cancel Ms. Lori Frederick Mac Dunbar Mr. and Mrs. David F. Haddow Anna Elmers’ Birthday Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Mary Ann Embleton Mr. John F. Embleton Mr. and Mrs. Brid B. Igleheart, Jr. Mrs. Blythe Marsau Mr. and Mrs. Fred Emry Mrs. Harriet Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Chris Eurton Major General and Mrs. David R. Bockel, Sr. Ms. Dorothy G. Evans Wishes Happy Holidays to: Ms. May Kennedy Jeremy Evans Ms. Wanda L. Jackson Brent R. Fails Mrs. Annette L. Evans Jackie Faircloth Mr. and Mrs. Scott Leslie Kathy Farris – Congratulations on your promotion! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Charlie Finch Ms. McRae Mayfield Frank Findley Ms. Jane S. Greenberger and Mr. P. Douglas Wexler The Shepherd Center adolescent team hosted a luau for inpatients in January to beat the cold. Occupational therapist Jill Seymore, counselor Cheryl Linden and physical therapist Jill Roecker pose for a picture while making fruity drinks. Mr. and Mrs. Barrett Howell Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kesterton Mr. and Mrs. Labe Little Mrs. Rebecca Moon Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Nease Mr. Dan Rather Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Von Thron Dr. and Mrs. L. Clayton Harrell Mr. and Mrs. George Ivey Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Lester Mr. and Mrs. Peter Roggeveen Matt Gonzalez Mr. Jim J. Barber Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Harrell Wish Happy Holidays to: Mr. and Mrs. Doug Benham Mrs. Liza Bryan Ms. Betsy Camp Mr. and Mrs. Jim Cumming Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Delonga Mr. George Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Donald Leslie Mr. and Mrs. Don Morgan Mr. Len Moscati Mrs. Winifred Newell Mr. and Mrs. Don Perry Mr. Edwin Rabine Mr. and Mrs. Chip Shirley Mr. and Mrs. Jim Smidt Ms. Mignon Topping Mr. and Mrs. John Walter Mr. and Mrs. Lee White Mr. Robert White Mr. and Mrs. Mike Willis Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Wilson Aaron Goodkin Miss Tobi Goodkin Kathy Gottlieb Mr. Emory A. Schwall Ellen T. Geddes Ms. Anne W. Geddes Mr. and Mrs. Adam Gray’s Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Gray, Sr. Georgia Department of Economic Development Miles Partnership Emily Green’s Speedy Recovery Mr. and Mrs. Milton Jacobson Glenn Epting Interior Design, Inc. Wishes to Honor Friends and Clients Evelyn and Paul Boone Jenny and Tom Bethel Amy and Adam Coffsky Carey Cox John Crawford Bowen and John Eagleson Stephanie and Michael Emry Kelsey and Joe Gaston Kim Lavender Joanna and Ian Irwin Martha and Benn Hutson Amy and Chris Lea Mary and Joe Lange Kelly and Brian Munn Jane Orahood Beth Anne and Cliff Stanford Karen and Mark Winarsky Martha Gibbs Mr. Vance A. Gibbs Mr. Daniel C. Gottwald Jane and Bob Gibson Wish Merry Christmas and a Happy 2015 to: Mrs. Jan Andrews Dr. and Mrs. John Gibson Mr. and Mrs. Creshul Harrison Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Green Wish Happy Holidays to: David Coulter and Family Cathy Holladay and Boys Frank Horne and Family Powell Lyn Griffin – My Friend Mr. and Mrs. Jeff A. Van Note Ms. Nena Griffith Wishes Merry Christmas to: Mr. and Mrs. Asa G. Candler V Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Engs Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ireland Mrs. William Ireland Mr. and Mrs. William C. Rawson Mrs. C. N. Nutter Mr. and Mrs. James G. Gullett Wish Happy Holidays to: Mr. Jennings Watkins Mr. John C. Hamilton Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. Ben Bunyard Mrs. Robert B. Coats, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robin Loudermilk Mr. and Mrs. James H. Hance, Jr. Wish Happy Holidays to: Mr. and Mrs. Seven Bishoric Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bissell Max Hardy Wishes Happy Holidays to his Clients Allison Harris Mr. Wesley A. Varda Clare T. Hartigan – Thanks! Dr. and Mrs. David F. Apple, Jr. Laura Hawkins – Great job on data! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. William “Bill” Hawks Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Hawks Caroline G. Hazel Ms. Evelyn G. Crosby Bryan Hewins LTC and Mrs. Floyd K. Maertens Thomas M. Hodges Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Hodges Mr. Frank A. Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Joe M. Phillips Erin Holt Ms. Ashley C. Dettlinger Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 31 Daisy Troop 14599 from E. Rivers Elementary School in Atlanta visited Shepherd Center in January to deliver Valentine’s Day cards and decorations for patients and the nursing units. During their visit, they learned about disabilities and even had a chance to share some love with Galion and Bentley, two of Shepherd’s therapy dogs. Minna Hong Mr. Scott J. Keithley Minna Hong – Great Board Presentation Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Della and Walt Hopkins Anonymous Donor Mr. and Mrs. Gene Howard Wish Happy Holidays to: Carol and Jim Thompson Bart P. Hudson Mr. and Mrs. Gregory A. Dunn William Hughes Mr. Jon W. Hughes Dorothy Hunt – Thank You Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Porter Hutto Mr. and Mrs. Larry C. Williams Lou Brown Jewell Ms. Margaret S. Hansen Robert Johnston – Expression of Thanks Mr. Evan Flynn Ms. Susan L. Kaiser Wishes Happy Holidays to: Alex Bach Lorraine Kaliher John L. Lin, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Kehoe Major General and Mrs. David R. Bockel, Sr. Parker S. King Mrs. Christy K. Davidson Nathan B. Klein Mr. and Mrs. Alfred W. Klein Mrs. Carol Klein and Mr. Michael Larter Ms. Terri R. Klein and Mr. Daniel I. Gup Catherine B. Kleiner Ms. Susan Bailey Sasha Klupchak’s Recovery Mr. Richard Klupchak 32 • news.shepherd.org Philippa Kort and Family Wish Happy Holidays to: Mrs. Barbara Abend Mr. and Mrs. Mark Allen Mr. and Mrs. Mark Antebi Mr. and Mrs. Fred Assaf and Family Dr. John Porter and Dr. Lucy Axtel Mr. Mitchell Barnes and Mr. Craig Weaver Dr. Benedict Benigno, Dr. Stephanie Yapp and office Dr. Jonathan Berek and Faculty Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Bergallo Mr. and Mrs. Ron Brill Mr. and Mrs. Barry Bruckman and Family Mr. and Mrs. John Burke Ms. Heather Burke and Mr. Colin McGuire Ms. Suzy Burke and Mark Mr. and Mrs. Michael Carlin and Family Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Christopher Mr. and Mrs. George Cleveland Mr. and Mrs. Stephan Cohen Ms. Kathy Cole Mr. and Mrs. Michael Corr Dr. and Mrs. Andy Currie Mr. and Mrs. David Deignan Mr. and Mrs. Blake Dexter Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Dexter and Family Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Dezelic Dr. and Mrs. Ivan Diamond Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Dubovsky Mr. and Mrs. Michael Firsowicz Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foell and Family Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Fricker Dr. Richard Friedman Dr. and Mrs. David Garber Dr. Iqbal Garcha and Dr. Stephanie Grogan Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Garmany Mr. and Mrs. Graydon Garner Mr. and Mrs. Chip Gerry Mr. and Mrs. Ron Glass Mr. and Mrs. Greg Glasson Mrs. Peggy Davis Gold and Ms. Sally Gold Mrs. Katherine Hanson and Family Mr. and Mrs. Armand Harris and Benjamin Mr. and Mrs. William Hartman and Family Mr. and Mrs. Ken Hawkins and Family Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Hilton and Admiral Travel Mr. and Mrs. John Hodges Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Hoffman and Family Ms. Anne Holdegrafer Mr. and Mrs. William Holley Ms. KC Hoppe and Ms. Kathleen Cook-Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Scott Inman Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Janelle Mr. and Mrs. Ray Joelson and Family Mr. and Mrs. David Joss Mr. and Mrs. Abby Kaplan Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Katz Mr. and Mrs. Jonny Kaye Mr. and Mrs. James Kennedy and Family Ms. Caroline King and Family Mr. Rollie Kjesbo Dr. Alan Kozarsky Mr. Paul Largay and Largettes Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Lazarus Mrs. Martha Gaughen Ms Sandy Legath Dr. and Mrs. Henry Leibowitz Mr. and Mrs. George Levert and Family Mr. and Mrs. Roland Liu Mr. Peter Lloyd and Mr. Gene Lashley Dr. and Mrs. Julian Lokey and Family Mr. and Mrs. Scott Lyon Mr. and Mrs. Barclay Macon Mr. Barclay Macon Mrs. Martin Maddern Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Manidis Dr. and Mrs. Basil Margolis Mr. and Mrs. Don Martinson Mr. and Mrs. David Massey Mrs. Susan Mathis, and Allene Mr. and Mrs. Rick Mayo Ms. Rachel McCaffery Mr. and Mrs. Julius Robberts Mr. and Mrs. William Meaney Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Meir Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Mendel Mr. and Mrs. William Merritt and Family Mr. and Mrs. Lester Miller Dr. and Mrs. Shapour Mobasser and Family Mr. John Moody and Mr. Hardy Holland Mr. and Mrs. Bill Moon Dr. Christine Murphy and Family Mr. and Mrs. Michael Murphy Mrs. Linda Ornstein Ms. Christiane Palpant Dr. and Mrs. Mundy Papadopoulos Mrs. Judy Peil Mr. and Mrs. Mark Pirrung Mr. and Mrs. Roy Plaut Dr. and Mrs. Zane Pollard Mr. and Mrs. Larry Powell Mr. and Mrs. Art Rollins Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Rose Mr. and Mrs. Arnie Rosenberg Dr. and Mrs. Len Sacks Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sacks Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sanders Dr. and Mrs. Don Sharp Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Shreiber and Family Mr. and Mrs. Mark Smith Mr. and Mrs. Peter Spiegel and Family Mr. and Mrs. Don Sutton and Jackie Mr. and Mrs. David Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Leon Udwin Mr. and Mrs. Jason Van Matre Mr. and Mrs. James Warren Mrs. Phoebe Weinberg and Family Dr. and Mrs. Harvey Weiss Mr. and Mrs. Dick White Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Frysh and Family Mr. Jeff Wiles Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wood Ms. Tanya Yudelman-Bloch Mr. and Mrs. David Zacks Mr. and Mrs. Chris Zanatta Janet Kraft Mr. Thomas Kraft Kathy Kreger – Great job on data! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Deborah G. Krotenberg Mr. and Mrs. David F. Haddow Matthew Lambdin Ms. Deanna Niemasz Jason L. Langdon Mr. and Mrs. Lewis E. Langdon, Jr. Dr. Donald P. Leslie Mr. and Mrs. J. Hays Mershon Dr. and Mrs. Donald P. Leslie’s Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Shaler Alias Dr. and Mrs. David F. Apple, Jr. Dr. Gerald S. Bilsky and Dr. Judith Tolkan Dr. Edelle Field-Fote Mr. and Mrs. Christopher R. Hardage Mr. and Mrs. Mark P. Hartigan Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Klein Mr. and Mrs. John J. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Dean Melcher Mr. and Ms. Jeffrey E. Morrison Dr. and Mrs. David S. Owens Mr. and Mrs. Eugene L. Pearce III Ms. Sherry G. Popwell Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan G. Roxland Mr. Emory A. Schwall Mr. and Mrs. J. Harold Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. John B. Sneed Ms. Jennifer K. Swindall Mr. J. Tyler Tippett Mr. and Mrs. Scott L. Tucker Dr. and Mrs. Gary R. Ulicny Mr. and Mrs. David P. White Mr. and Mrs. Zachary M. Wilson Jeff A. Lewis – Great job on data! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Dr. John Lin AXA Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Briggs, Jr. Virginia Lippincott Mr. and Mrs. Izumi Fujita Mrs. Tomoko Kase Ms. Yoko Kusano Micko Morisaki Mrs. Mikako Okamoto Chiaki Tsuji Mr. and Mrs. Jun Ueda Lindsay Loflin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Loflin Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Long Wish Merry Christmas to: Mr. Emory Schwall Todd Lyles Ms. Tracy Godwin Mr. and Mrs. John Longcrier Mr. and Mrs. William Mabry Judge Phyllis Kravitch Chip Mack Major General and Mrs. David R. Bockel, Sr. Will D. Magruder, Sr. Mr. Will D. Magruder Faye and Lewis Manderson Central Alabama Community Foundation Michael D. Marchand Ms. Barbara Richardson Anita Marino Family Insurance Services, Inc. Virginia Martin – Congratulations on your promotion! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Willard McBurney Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Tackett Mr. and Mrs. Willard McBurney Wish Merry Christmas to: Mr. and Mrs. Roger Blocks Mr. and Mrs. Sam Buckmaster Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cousins Mr. and Mrs. Dick Cravey Mrs. Nanette Crowdus Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cutlip Dr. and Mrs. Dave Davis Mrs.Carolyn Ewing Mr. and Mrs. Hix Green Mr. and Mrs. Steve Kane Mrs. Olivia Anne Leon Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Levy Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Long Mr. Charlie Loudermilk Dr. and Mrs. John McColskey Dr. and Mrs. Foad Nahai Mr. and Mrs. Mid Parker Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Richert Mr. and Mrs. John Simms Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Tackett Mr. and Mrs. Woody White Mr. and Mrs. Barney Wiggins Rebecca M. McCallum-McWalters – Great article on you and Frosty Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Tommie Ann and Patrick McCormack Joyce and V.D. Scott Foundation, Inc. Douglas McCray Captain James H. McCray II Emily P. McIntyre Mr. and Mrs. V. Thomas Purcell, Jr. Julie McLean Ms. Marianna McLean Mulkey McMichael’s Birthday Ms. Carolyn C. Moye Raymond N. McMillan Ms. Shirley Pfister Selby and Randall Millard Ms. Martha Lane Angela Mitchell Ms. McRae Mayfield Akira Mizutani Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. Ben Lippincott Mr. and Mrs. John Mobley Wish Merry Christmas to: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bridges Mr. and Mrs. Brad Burnette Mr. and Mrs. Peter Candler Mr. and Mrs. James Christians Mr. and Mrs. Clisby Clarke Ms. Carol Dean Davis Mr. and Mrs. Willis Dobbs Mr. and Mrs. John Illges III Mr. Ed Jones Mr. and Mrs. William Maner Mr. and Mrs. Berry Mobley Ms. Martha Ann Mobley Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mobley Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Nalley Mr. and Mrs. English Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Gary Sams Mr. and Mrs. William Tanner Mr. Wilbur Warner Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Wood Michael Moderow Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Moderow Marina Moldavskiy – Great job on data! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Doyle K. Mote Mr. and Mrs. Martin M. Pollock Ms. Carolyn C. Moye Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. Mulkey McMichael Julie and David Mucher’s Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Gil C. Mucher Multiple Sclerosis Patients Ms. Stephanie Miles Dr. and Mrs. Jimmy C. Nash Wish Much Love and a Very Merry Christmas to: Mr. Bobby Hogg Irma Navarro Ms. McRae Mayfield Fran Newbold Mohr Mr. Jerry M. Newbold Lauren Nieves – PT Day Program Dr. Mark Loveland Sally D. Nunnally’s Friendship Mrs. Christina R. Freeman Bryan Overly Ms. McRae Mayfield Bright Woodruff Owens Mrs. Katherine F. Williams Stephen Paul Mr. and Mrs. David Paul Benjamin Perretti Ms. Janice M. Hildreth The Peters Company at Keller Williams Realty Peachtree Road Wishes Happy Holidays to their Clients and Friends Jerry Pickens Mr. Frank L. Pritchard and Ms. Amy K. Parker Plant Improvement Company, Inc. Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Aftergut Dr. and Mrs. Perry Ballard Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Blanchard Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Boots Mr. and Mrs. Warren Brown Mr. and Mrs. Zim Cauble Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Coole Mr. and Mrs. Steve Copeland Mr. and Mrs. William A. Dirico, Jr. Ms. Barb Dockweiler Mr. and Mrs. Mike Eddy Mr. and Mrs. David Flint Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Funtain Mr. and Mrs. Bill Geiger Mr. Geoff Gober Mr. and Mrs. John Gordon Mr. and Mrs. David Grayson Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Grizzard Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Haney, Jr. Ms. Mindy Hyde Mrs. Liane Levetan Mr. Charles Loudermilk Mr. Michael Mills Mr. David J. Moellering Mr. and Mrs. Ben Murray Mr. and Mrs. Robert Patrick Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Pearce Mr. and Mrs. Paul Perry Mr. and Mrs. Arnie Pittman Mr. and Mrs. Louie Pittman Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sams Mr. Sandy Sanford Mr. and Mrs. Danny Shepherd Mrs. E. R. Snell Mr. Fido Snell Mr. and Mrs. Robin Snell Mr. and Mrs. Jim Stephenson Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Strickland Mr. and Mrs. Warren Wheeler Mr. and Mrs. Goodloe Yancey III Mr. P. Dan Yates, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. P. Dan Yates III Toby Regal’s Recovery Ms. Sharon Regal Mr. and Mrs. Neal Q. Pope Major General and Mrs. David R. Bockel, Sr. Rodney Rogers’s Recovery Mr. and Mrs. Chris Collier Mr. and Mrs. Ronel Poppell Major General and Mrs. David R. Bockel, Sr. Christopher Port – 25th year graduating from Shepherd Center Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Port Tom and Kathy Port Mr. Christopher Port Zachary Poss Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Laird Corey C. Potts Mr. and Mrs. Michael Maguigan James E. Prickett Dr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Callahan James E. Prickett and Family Mr. and Mrs. Jon W. Paulson Mr. and Mrs. James E. Prickett Wish Merry Christmas to: Mr. and Mrs. Brian Brown Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cheek Dr. and Mrs. Tom Callahan Ms. Bette Hines Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hines Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lucas Mr. and Mrs. Mike Stephens Ms. Pat Thomas Mr. and Mrs. John Turman Mr. and Mrs. John Weitnauer William G. Pritchard Mr. and Mrs. Robert U. Goodman Raven Internet Marketing Tools Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. Gregory Jones Heather Ray Ms. Ramona S. Ray Kelly Regal Sucherman Consulting Group, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Reichenbach Mrs. Harriett Robinson Cody Reyes Mr. Ronald R. Reyes Jamie Reynolds III Mr. and Mrs. Gentry R. Strickland Michael Rhoton Mr. and Mrs. Wayne W. Shackelford Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Richert, Jr. Wish Happy Holidays to: Darla and Willard McBurney Mrs. Susan C. Ricks Wishes Happy Holidays to: Ms. Mary James-Ricks Tara C. Robertson Ms. Mary Diana Robertson Hannah C. Robinson Ms. Noreen Horrigan Joe Rogers, Jr.’s Birthday Mr. Joseph M. Rogers Sylvia Ronco – Thanks for excellence in Respiratory Threapy Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. April and John Rooker on the birth of Mary “Tatum” Rooker Mr. and Mrs. James H. Shepherd III David Rutledge, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Rutledge Matthew Sanchez Ms. Cynthia Sokolic Joey Sands Ms. Jennifer J. Sands Vickie S. Scaljon Mr. Nicholas Carroll James Schilling Ms. Susan McComb Mr. Gary Schilling Shannon Schneider The Charles & Esther Kimerling Charitable Foundation Bobbie and Bill Schneidewind Wish Merry Christmas to: Mrs. James MacWhinney Mr. and Mrs. Gil Schneidewind Mrs. William Wiedersheim Emory A. Schwall Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. McLure Mrs. Jo Williams Linda Servin Mrs. Sam Arogeti Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Shanor Wish Happy Holidays to: L J Brewer Shapiro Capital Management LLC Wishes Happy Holidays to Their Clients Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 33 Susan B. Sheehy Ms. Erica Garofalo Alana Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Russell C. Ashmore, Jr. Mr. Herbert Cohen Dr. and Mrs. Andy Currie Ms. Leslie M. Dees Mr. and Mrs. Samuel I. DuBose Dr. John D. Engel Mrs. Betty Ann Inman Mrs. Deborah M. Krupp and Mr. Armin Krupp Mr. and Mrs. Thomas O. Powell James H. Shepherd, Jr. Ms. Carter M. Hoyt Dr. and Mrs. Andy Currie Stephen B. Shepherd’s Friendship Mr. John T. Bohlayer Clyde Shepherd III Bickers Consulting Group, LLC Shepherd Center Pathways Therapists who worked miracles for Keith Ms. Debra F. Bean Shepherd Center Promotion and ASW Staff Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. Edmonds Shepherd Center SHARE Military Initiative for disabled Veterans Mr. Michael B. Randall Ms. Barbara Linden Shepherd Center Staff Mr. and Mrs. Galen L. Oelkers Mr. Gary Schilling Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Werner Mr. and Mrs. Ronald H. Elliott Global Concierge Medicine, Inc. Kay R. Shirley Mr. Mark L. Woods Brian N. Shonson’s Recovery Mr. and Mrs. Joel K. Isenberg Mark C. Shuler Mr. and Mrs. James S. Long Mr. and Mrs. Bert E. Shuler Dell B. Sikes’s Birthday Dr. and Mrs. David F. Apple, Jr. Mary Ann and Dell Sikes Ms. Merrill Ellis Kelley B. Simoneaux Mr. and Mrs. Bradly J. Atkin Josh Sloan Mr. Carter Whitley Megan and John Stephenson The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta Ms. Wynne Stevenson Wishes Merry Christmas to: Dr. and Mrs. Champ Baker Mr. and Mrs. Frank Carroll Mr. and Mrs. Robert David Mr. and Mrs. Tim Flournoy Mr. and Mrs. Frank Foley Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner Garrard Mr. and Mrs. Tony Link Mr. and Mrs. Matt Swift Mr. and Mrs. Richard Waddell Dr. and Mrs. John Waldrop Samuel C. Stronach, Jr. Ms. Molly Norton Laurie and Larry Swenson Mr. and Mrs. Neil Berman Siavash, Roya and Farid Termei Mr. Tyler Davidson Glynda S. Thor Mr. Joe Gaskin Matthew Thornburg Mr. Bruce R. Stuart Hunter V. Thornton – Honor Student Notre Dame High, Los Angeles Dr. and Mrs. Garrett W. Thornton, Jr. Ben W. Thrower, MD Ms. Joyce Bihary Mr. Jerry M. Newbold Lisette Tiller – Great Board Presentation! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Janice M. Tilley – Great job on data! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Tony L. White Mr. Colby McDowell Sally G. Tomlinson – for her years of friendship to Shepherd Center Mrs. Lindsey Hopkins III Carol Girata and Tim Whittemore Ms. Laura J. Gravesen US Military Servicemen Ms. Janet Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Reginald I. Vachon Mrs. John M. Bell Bessie Valle Ms. Janet Phillips Karen and Tommy Vance Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Reeve III Garland Smith Mr. and Mrs. George K. Wolfes, Jr. Dan Waite Mrs. Eve J. Brown-Waite Jennifer L. Smith – Great Board Presentation! Dr. David F. Apple, Jr. Jennings E. Watkins’s Birthday Mrs. Merrin A. Anderson 34 • news.shepherd.org Ms. Jane Wheeler Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Adler Mr. and Mrs. Daniel H. Bradley Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Croft III Mrs. Carol Curtis Mr. and Mrs. Holcombe T. Green Mr. and Mrs. W. Donald Knight, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Jerry Lynn, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Nalley III Mr. and Mrs. McKee Nunnally Mrs. Allen Post Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Shaffer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Wallace Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Whitman Mr. and Mrs. Dale H. Tucker Wesley A. Varda Mr. Martin B. Chadwick Mr. Brian Lemond William Stahel Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Shanor Mr. and Mrs. William B. Wellons, Jr. Wish Happy Holidays to: Mrs. Gregory Anderson Lauren Tilley Mrs. Tana P. Tilley Tom Sloope’s Recovery Ms. Mary Ann DuBose Jamie Stafford Ms. Susan E. Hadden Patricia Burks, of Duluth, Ga., enjoys a game of Bingo at Shepherd Center’s annual Casino Night held March 5 and hosted by Shepherd Center Recreation Therapy. Phillip W. Watters’s Recovery Mr. and Mrs. David F. Haddow Anne and George Wellington Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Wellington Kirk Wilder Mr. and Mrs. David S. Nichols Hanson Williams Mr. Chris C. Carter Mr. David C. Carter Elizabeth W. Willis Mrs. Katherine F. Williams Carla and Leonard Wood Anonymous Donor Marinel T. Wood Ms. Katherine H. Crumley Joan Woodall Wishes Happy Holidays to: Mr. and Mrs. James Alban Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Ansley Mrs. McCary Ballard Mrs. James Black Mrs. John Bowen Mrs. Roy Bowen Mrs. Charles Brethen Mrs. Douglas Browing Mr. and Mrs. George Chase Mr. and Mrs. Don Dennard Mrs. Hayes Dever Mrs. C. W. Dukehart Mr. and Mrs. John Fletcher Mrs. Barbara Folmar Mr. and Mrs. Larry Foster Mrs. Julian Fowler Mrs. Gene Gwaltney Mr. and Mrs. William Hatcher Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Hehir Mr. and Mrs. Harry Howard Mr. and Mrs. Barrett Howell Mrs. Joseph Hutchinson Mrs. Robert Ingram Mrs. A. B. Martin Mrs. Thomas Martin Ms. Lee Moran Mrs. Edward McDuffie Mrs. Morris Shadburn Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sterling Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Stockton Mr. George Trask Mr. William Warren III Mrs. Jean Wente Jane Woodruff Mr. and Mrs. Charlie N. D’Huyvetter Cecilia R. Wright Mr. and Mrs. Jerry R. Smith Lois and Danny Yates Wish Happy Holidays to: Ms. Wilma Bunch Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cousins Dr. and Mrs. David Dubose Mr. and Mrs. Keith Hicks Mr. and Mrs. Tom Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Rob Johnston Mr. Charles Loudermilk Mr and Mrs. Robin Loudermilk Mr. and Mrs. John Miner Mr. and Mrs. Louie Pittman Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ripley Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Harold Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. James Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Steve Shepherd Mr. Tommy Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Dell Sikes Mr. and Mrs. Steve Sloan Ms Ginny Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Frank Troutman Dr. and Mrs. Gary Ulicny Charlie Young Mr. Charles Moberly Photo by Sabrina Evans Carol C. Sharkey Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Brewer memorials m Deceased friends of Shepherd Center are listed first in bold print followed by the names of those making gifts in their memory. This list reflects gifts made to Shepherd Center between Nov. 1, 2014 and Jan. 31, 2015. Chad E. Albritton Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Albritton Kyle Burkhalter Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Mount Paran Woods Garden Club Ms. Ann D. Swertfeger Aline F. Alias Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Chapman, Jr. Donatic Gordon C. Bynum, Jr. Ms. Catherine Fike Mark English Ms. Frankie Rickenbaker L. C. Carlisle Mr. and Mrs. J. David Penson Brian Etheredge Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bass Dana M. Carr Mr. and Mrs. Rick Carr Ms. Barbara Luther Katharine Evans Mrs. William E. Grabbe Ms. May G. Kennedy Bryan C. Griffin Mrs. Sally C. Atwell Anthony Louis Celidonio Ms. Donna Peluso Mr. William H. Wyche Frank G. Falkner Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Hurd, Jr. James Hunter Groome Mr. and Mrs. William C. Smith Eleanor M. Cheney Mr. and Mrs. Homer W. Whitman, Jr. Gloria P. Felder Dr. Daniel C. Bacon and Mrs. Lauren Felder-Bacon Leola Guemmer Mr. Richard H. Guemmer Karl Anschutz’s Birthday Mr. and Mrs. Werner Anschutz Martha and Albert Church Mrs. Martha J. Church Charlie Franco Mr. and Mrs. Joel K. Isenberg Bernice S. Apple Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Hunt George Clisby Clarke Mr. Clarence H. Taylor, Jr. David F. Apple, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Hunt Don Collins Mrs. Linnie H. Ailey David L. Funk Ms. Donna S. Aranson Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Lipman Marvin R. Back Mr. and Mrs. Steven Back Phillip Conley Ms. Karen F. Johnston and Mr. Robert A. Lieberman George Altman Mr. and Mrs. Joel K. Isenberg Betty June Anderson Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Evelyn D. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. James Lebow Laura and Karl Anschutz Ms. Esther L. Abisamra Ms. Hope Abisamra John C. Bair Mrs. John C. Bair Dorothy C. Fuqua The Shepherd Center Auxiliary Jean Gamble Mrs. Jeff Griffin Randolph R. Goulding Major General and Mrs. David R. Bockel, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Larry G. Hailey Mrs. Frances W. Ramsey Florence Green Ms. Karen F. Johnston and Mr. Robert A. Lieberman George T. Gunnell LTC and Mrs. Victor Macias Richard A. Guthman Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Marie M. Hamilton Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Hurd, Jr. Clement E. Hanrahan Ms. Mary Baird Mr. and Mrs. John Bardis Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Briggs Mr. Jay Dority Mr. Jack Duffy Mr. and Mrs. Rich Henry Mr. and Mrs. George Hofman Ms. Dorothy C. Holding Mr. and Mrs. Gary Lee, Jr. Mr. Stephen Loftis Mr. Dennis Mahan Mr. and Mrs. Clive A. McAllister Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Mewborn Mr. David Murray Mr. and Mrs. Kent C. Nelson Mr. and Mrs. Robert O’Connor Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Palmisano UPS GA Retiree Group Mr. and Mrs. George R. Wilson Charles G. Bartenfeld Mr. and Mrs. John G. Alston, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Sorenson Meredith Phia Cooper Bernhardt Mrs. Minna Hong and Mr. Wayne K. Ware Debra Garlington Mrs. Cheryl K. Andrews Mr. David C. Garlington Gertrude “Gertie” Cooper Ms. Virginia Lippincott Ann J. Gatwood LTC Eugene G. Gatwood Bryan Bartley Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Bassett IV Bryan Cox Mr. and Mrs. Terry J. Cox Dr. Linton H. Bishop Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Aldredge Mrs. Ralph A. Murphy George William Crist III Mrs. Susan G. Crist Diana Eve Dorsey Mrs. Martha J. Church John W. Gatz Mr. Jackie Bradford Ms. Amy Freeman Mr. and Mrs. Scott Gage Ms. Dorothy B. Groover Mr. and Mrs. Randall Jackson Ms. Tasha D. Jenkins Mr. and Mrs. Fred McFaddin Mr. and Mrs. Robert Medlock Mr. Alvin L. Pilkinton, Jr. Mr. William G. Pritchard, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Richardson Ms. Susan M. Rupert Mr. Mike Smith Ms. Debbie Teal Mr. and Mrs. Van Thompson Mr. Dale L. Tino Mr. and Mrs. Terrence M. Tracy Trophikos, LLC Ms. Jennifer R. Winters Tom Duggan – A very special friend Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Reynolds Adolfo Gentil Mr. and Mrs. James H. Shepherd III Mr. and Mrs. David P. White Bettie J. Elarbee Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Cantrell Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Ms. Jan Dillard Mr. and Mrs. James A. Easterling Mr. Vincent Gresham Margaret Gillogly Mr. and Mrs. James F. George Colonel John W. Hill Mrs. Carol D. Hill George E. Goodwin Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Morton S. Hodgson, Jr. The Hodgson Charitable Trust Eleanor D. Blass Mr. and Mrs. Joel K. Isenberg Mr. and Mrs. Harllee Branch, Jr. Ms. Elizabeth L. Branch Lester Travis Brannon Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Margaret Ann Bratton Mr. Ray R. Bratton Mr. and Mrs. David Wilder Lovic A. Brooks, Jr. Ms. Kathy Caputo Betty A. Brown Ms. Beth Edwards Tackett Phillip H. Brown Ms. Margaret A. Fultz Eldon Burgess Mr. and Mrs. John V. Zalewski Torin D. Crowder Mr. and Mrs. Kevin R. Jones, Sr. Tommy D. Dean Ms. Mary H. Dean Frances Dewitt Mr. Gary P. Alexander Dr. Fred Dorrough Ms. Karen T. Dorrough Cannon Harmon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Neufeld Cpt. Ralph J. Harting Mr. Alexander Hou Donna Harvard William Howard Flowers, Jr. Foundation, Inc. Jack Hendrixson Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Dundon Bert “Bud” Hene, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Paul C. Hene Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 35 Elizabeth R. Holt Mr. and Mrs. David G. Hunter II Frank W. Hulse IV Ms. Sherry G. Popwell Mr. and Mrs. Ferle G. Snell Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Stith Mr. and Mrs. J. Martin Turbidy Mr. and Mrs. Roger Vernier Ms. Phyllis M. Winegar Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Winslow Opal G. McAlpin Mr. and Mrs. Julian Bajorek Mr. and Mrs. Mike Haremski Ms. Kay Heckman Mr. and Ms. Randy Maddox Mr. Emory McDougal Mrs. Corinne W. Samford Mr. and Mrs. Clark D. Strickland Martha H. Jarrard Aladdin Metal Products, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. James R. Jenkins Ms. Era K. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Steven Troccoli Mr. and Mrs. Wesley L. Wells, Jr. Robert F. Kern Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Marie Monrose Jaubert Dr. and Mrs. George Rives Cary, Jr. Michael Kober Ms. Harriet K. Weinberg B. Henderson Johnson Mrs. Doris Johnson Dr. Hilton I. Kort Mr. Donald G. Sharp Calhoun M. McDougall Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Duggan Mrs. Reginald Heinitsh Mrs. Charles H. Peterson Curtis Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Mickey L. Cauthen John Charles Kranyecz, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Kranyecz Michael D. McGuffey Mr. and Mrs. Max E. McGuffey Frances Elizabeth “Beth” Johnson Dr. and Mrs. David F. Apple, Jr. Audrey Leola Lampman Ms. Barbara Luther Mr. and Mrs. Dale E. Taft Mr. and Mrs. Gene R. Wheeler John R. McKinney, Jr. Ms. Janet H. Baxley Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Roddenberry Mr. Roy Stewart Harry Laughlin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William Schultz Laura G. McKinney The Scott Hudgens Family Foundation, Inc. Tina M. Johnson Ms. Cathy A. Bird Tom E. Johnson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Myers Bert B. Jones Mr. J. David Allen Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Allen Ms. Tracy Anderson Dr. and Mrs. David F. Apple, Jr. Mrs. Julie K. Arnold Mr. and Mrs. W. Glenn Bell Blount-Sanford Const. Co. Mr. and Mrs. William T. Brice Mr. and Mrs. John B. Brown Mr. and Mrs. William S. Burt Mr. and Mrs. Curtis V. Cheney, Jr. Mr. and Ms. George M. Drake Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Dundon Ms. Margaret M. Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas A. Grayson Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Greene Mrs. Alice D. Grotnes Mrs. Sarah Grow Mr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Guidos Mr. and Mrs. E. Lewis Hansen Mr. Ted Hansen Mrs. Saralyn Hill Mr. and Mrs. James E. Hindy Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Hoke Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Hunter Mrs. Gail B. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Kozlak Mr. and Mrs. Marvin W. Krehmeyer Mr. and Mrs. Gary M. Laskey Ms. Linda Leake Mr. and Mrs. Steven Lee Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. McGahan Ms. Anna Millar Mr. Boyce E. Miller Ms. Holly A. Mitchell Mr. Marion A. Morrison Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Mosshart Ms. Judith P. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Scott J. Oakley Mr. and Ms. Jack E. Olden Mr. John F. Pensec Pittman Construction Company Mr. and Mrs. Louie A. Pittman, Jr. Chris Pratts Mr. Jerry Rhea Mr. and Mrs. William T. Roberts, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Santillo Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Schmid Mr. and Mrs. William C. Schuh Mr. and Mrs. David W. Schwenk Ms. Susan S. Scott Ms. Janet Slater 36 • news.shepherd.org Jean Jordan Mr. David Jordan Deanna L. Lee Mrs. Charles H. Peterson Terry Lee Mr. Stephen L. Griffin William O. Lillard Mrs. Janice Moser Daniel “Labe” Little Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Kesterton Martha “Cissy” McCord Dr. and Mrs. David F. Apple, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. T. Rudy Harrell Dawn McNally Mr. and Mrs. Randal W. Norris Helen H. Means Mrs. Joan D. Woodall Samuel “Mike” Means Copeland & Johns, Inc. Pen Lybrook Ms. Phyllis Brooks Bobby G. Meeks and in honor of his great-grandson Justice Meeks Mrs. Linda C. Meeks Robert F. Mabon Mrs. Robert Mabon Dr. James H. Milsap, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene T. Horn John D. “Jack” Margeson Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Larry G. Hailey Lynford Mortland Mr. Bruce D. Burton Jane J. Marsden Mr. William Archer Dr. and Mrs. Victor E. Corrigan Mrs. Carolyn A. Ewing Mr. and Mrs. T. Rudy Harrell Ms. Helen Q. Hull Mr. and Mrs. Ben Jenkins Ms. Gloria J. Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Rubenoff Ms. Virginia F. White Ralph A. Murphy Mrs. Ralph A. Murphy Mark J. Nichelson Mrs. Robert C. Beauchamp Robert W. Northrop Mr. and Mrs. Palmer T. Northrop Adam J. O’Neill Ms. Helen Hudson Dr. and Mrs. Mark S. Wald Olivia Martin Mr. and Mrs. James M. Flournoy Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Rubenoff Bruno Palombini Mr. and Mrs. Luis Ramos Evan T. Mathis Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Lola H. Park Mr. and Mrs. James A. Laird Sara Lee Mattingly Bencomo & Associates Mr. William J. Bruckner Mr. and Mrs. Frank Corrigan Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Craft II Ms. Kathy Craig Heller Mr. and Mrs. William H. Kitchens Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. George D. Overend Mr. and Ms. Brooks Patterson Mr. and Mrs. DeNean Stafford III Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Toon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Waidelich, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Herron P. Weems Dr. James Perry Parker, Jr. Mary Ann Parker Nancy F. Parker Mr. William A. Parker III Troy L. Partain Mrs. June C. Partain Mark P. Pentecost Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Duggan Mrs. Joan D. Woodall Charles H. Peterson Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Peterson, Jr. Bartie and Oscar Plunket, Jr. Ms. Jane Plunket Beverly J. Pritchard Mr. and Mrs. Robert U. Goodman Michael L. Rae’s Birthday Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rae Mikie Rae Mr. and Mrs. Raymond B. Couture, Jr. Laura A. Ratterree Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Brenner, Jr. Ms. Mary-Sydney McAllister Mr. Gregory W. Post Robert L. “Bobby” Rearden Dr. and Mrs. David F. Apple, Jr. Mr. Robert A. Roach SPC Steven Tyler Redmon Mr. and Mrs. John Godi Mr. and Mrs. Russ Latimer Mr. and Mrs. Darrin Moore George Reynolds Ms. Virginia Lippincott Robert W. Rhodes Contractors Bonding of the South LLC Daniel D. Richardson Mrs. Lindsey Hopkins III Dr. and Mrs. John J. Riordan Mr. John F. Riordan Rudy Roaissel, Jr. Ms. Tracy Godwin William E. Robinson Dr. and Mrs. David O. Ellis Mr. and Mrs. Keith A. Reichenbach Mrs. Harriet Robinson Clyde A. Rodbell Dr. and Mrs. David F. Apple, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Cambias, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Conklin II Mr. and Mrs. John S. Dryman Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Glass Ms. Peggy F. Goldberg Mr. Lee C. Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Warren Y. Jobe Mr. and Mrs. Bernard M. Marcus Mrs. Hilary Pepper Nelson Mr. and Mrs. Martin M. Pollock Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. Schlaifer Mr. and Mrs. J. Harold Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Dell B. Sikes Mr. and Mrs. James H. Singer Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Tucker Ruth L. Rosenberg Dr. and Mrs. Don P. Engelberg Ronnie W. Rudd Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Williams Marjorie B. Schwab Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Schwab Randy Shampney, Sr. Hillsboro Ford, Inc. Julius “Bud” Shaw Mr. and Mrs. J. Harold Shepherd Isham M. Sheffield Mrs. McCary Ballard Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Mrs. Joan D. Woodall 1 2 Iva and Grant Shepherd Ms. Mildred I. Shepherd Douglas A. Spence Mr. and Mrs. Moses M. Spence C. Richard Shepherd Mrs. Mary K. Shepherd Lars Steib Mrs. McCary Ballard Dana J. Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Bowen Ms. Nancy J. Cahill Mr. and Mrs. Hugh W. Cornwell Mr. and Mrs. Bradford D. Jordan Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Morris Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Rubenoff Mr. Charles R. Simons, Jr. Stanley H. Smith, Jr., Esq. Donald B. Stewart, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Coleman Ellen Silva Mr. and Mrs. Douglas S. Arnold Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kontio Sam S. Singer III Mr. and Ms. Brooks Patterson Mrs. Ann Singer 1. A group of military service members train for their second Shepherd’s Men run. This year they will run 911 miles from New York City’s Ground Zero to Shepherd Center April 19–26 to raise money for Shepherd Center’s SHARE Military Initiative. For more information, visit ShepherdsMen.com. (Photo by Louis Favorite) 2. Former Shepherd Center patient Von Fusco, 20, of Orlando completed the Warrior Dash 5K obstacle course race in Clermont, Fla., on Jan. 31, 2015 with his father, John Fusco and John’s Air Force Reserve teammates. Von sustained a severe brain injury in 2012 when a vehicle hit him as he was crossing a road. (Photo courtesy of John Fusco) Gloria Stone Ms. Linda Coatsworth Colonel and Mrs. William H. Stubbs Ms. Elizabeth L. Branch Herman Eugene Talmadge, Jr. Dr. Martha P. McKeon and Mr. Thomas M. McKeon Dr. and Mrs. Hal S. Raper Dale Travis Debbie and Sandy Selnick Jay Patrick Welch Mr. Gerald Welch Mary Ann and Jack Tyson Mr. and Mrs. Lee P. Hopkins Allison F. Williams Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Page and Doris Ufford Mr. and Ms. Edward Casey Patricia C. Williams Mr. and Mrs. James M. Caswell, Jr. Dora W. Voyles Mr. and Mrs. William R. Brantley John B. “Jay” Woodruff Mr. and Mrs. Pearson Beardsley Mr. and Mrs. Andy Farmer Ms. Betsy F. Flournoy Mr. and Mrs. Pierre M. Kimball III Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lindsey Ms. Elizabeth W. Willis Kendall Corrine Smith Mr. and Mrs. H. Howard Smith III Carolyn Thomas in honor of her life and research Mrs. Joan Archibald Ms. Josephine Boda Mr. and Mrs. Angelo F. De Vito Ms. Donna S. Falke Mrs. Minna Hong and Mr. Wayne K. Ware Ms. Nancy Keyser Orange Coast College Enrollment Services Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Ramsauet Mr. and Mrs. Jack Smith Mr. Peter D. Thomas Mr. Tim Ullon Ms. Chang S. Hong and Mr. Roger L. Zrimec Lawrence E. Smith Ms. Stephanie L. Peacock Glenn M. Thompson Mrs. Lola M. Thompson David Webb Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Webb, Sr. Randolph Smith AXA Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Briggs, Jr. Samuel C. Thrower Ms. Mary C. Fishburne Becky Webreck Mr. Jack Webreck JT Townsend The JT Townsend Foundation, Inc. Mildred Weissman Ms. Jan Weissman Ronald Singleton Mr. and Mrs. James R. Henderson Patricia Skowronski Mr. and Mrs. Michael Skowronski Kimberlee Slatton Mr. Herbert Slatton Claire D. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Keith Ed Voyles Mr. and Mrs. William R. Brantley Elizabeth A. Walz Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Rubenoff Mr. Jack V. Walz Dr. Edward Warrick Ms. Lark W. O’Neal Milton H. “Jay” Woodside Mr. and Mrs. Addison H. Meriwether Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Woodside, Jr. Ms. Mary A. Workman Michael C. Waters Mr. and Mrs. Mario J. DeLaguardia Virginia Wooten Mr. and Mrs. Wayne H. Arden Dorothy E. Watkins Mr. and Mrs. James L. Watkins Jo.Lane Wright Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Dutson, Sr. Mrs. William E. Grabbe Mrs. Reginald Heinitsh Mr. and Mrs. David M. Lacy Mr. and Mrs. J. Harold Shepherd Ida and Don Yancey Mr. John A. Taylor Spinal Column® / Spring 2015 • 37 Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Atlanta, GA Permit No. 1703 Address Service Requested Shepherd Center’s SHARE Military Initiative Receives Grant from the Bob Woodruff Foundation The SHARE Military Initiative at Shepherd Center has received a grant from the Bob Woodruff Foundation (BWF) to help support the hospital’s rehabilitation and treatment program for service members and veterans who have served in the OEF, OIF and OND wars. The Bob Woodruff Foundation works to ensure injured veterans and their families thrive long after they return home. The team at BWF navigates the maze of more than 46,000 nonprofit organizations to find and fund innovative programs in communities where veterans, their families and caregivers live and work. The grant will help fund, in part, a new life coach, who will engage with SHARE Military Initiative clients once they return home to ensure they are able to fully integrate the techniques they learned in therapy to their daily life. “We are honored to receive recognition from such a prestigious organization as the Bob Woodruff Foundation,” said Susan Johnson, program director of the Shepherd Center Brain Injury Program. “At SHARE, we strive to provide the best possible care for service members and veterans. With this grant, we will be able to expand our program and continue to help these men and women make a successful transition back to the community.” The SHARE Military Initiative will use the grant it has received from the Bob Woodruff Foundation to help fund a life coach, who will follow SHARE clients once they have returned home from the program. (Photo by Gary Meek) As a grant recipient, the SHARE Military Initiative joins the BWF grantee network, a collaboration of top-tier programs and advocates working to help our heroes on the homefront. “Receiving a grant from BWF is an honor that recognizes the dedication, focus and effectiveness of SHARE’s staff, volunteers and supporters,” said Anne Marie Dougherty, executive director of BWF. To find out more about the Bob Woodruff Foundation, visit bobwoodrufffoundation.org, follow @Stand4Heroes on Twitter and like BFW’s page on Facebook at facebook.com/ Stand4Heroes. Read more about SHARE at shepherd.org/SHARE.