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Lee Woodruff '82 writes on brain injuries in Parade

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Lee Woodruff '82 shares important information about traumatic brain injury (TBI) and her family's experience with the issue in a cover story for Parade magazine.

Woodruff's article, "Can Brains Be Saved?," appeared in the magazine on Sunday. Parade has a circulation of 33 million and appears in 475 newspapers nationwide.

Most everyone knows how Woodruff's husband, Bob '83, was injured by a roadside bomb in January 2006 while covering the Iraq war for ABC News.

Shrapnel was embedded in his face, neck, and back, and his skull was shattered. Doctors did not think he would ever walk or talk again or regain much mental function.

woodruffcover.jpgLee Woodruff writes that today, apart from mild aphasia-- difficulty in finding the appropriate word to use -- Bob is back as a husband and father and on the air as a journalist at ABC News. (In fact, Bob is back in Iraq reporting for ABC, the first time he has returned there.)

The Parade article discusses how Bob continues to improve, and how thanks to advances in the treatment of traumatic brain injury, the outlook for patients has dramatically improved.

The Woodruffs continue to raise awareness of the issue and its impact on members of the military and their families through the Bob Woodruff Foundation, which is at www.remind.org.

They also are looking to provide assistance to war veterans through Tweet to ReMind, a fundraising effort using social networking tools.

The Woodruffs co-wrote In an Instant, which was a New York Times bestseller that helped raise awareness about traumatic brain injuries. Lee Woodruff recently published her second book, an essay collection called Perfectly Imperfect: A Life in Progress.


2 Comments

Thanks to Lee for continuing to use her writing gifts to inspire us all with the amazing story of Bob and his family. With the dramatic increase in veterans who survive head injuries, Bob's story points to an ever-increasing need to focus on brain rehabilitation treatments and the plights of so many with "hidden" injuries. Kudos to the Woodruffs for all their ongoing efforts.

July 15, 2009 4:17 PM
John Rogers said:

My daughter Bailey ('07) survived major surgery to remove a massive amount of blood in the back of her brain caused by an AVM. The resulting recovery and rehab process is essentially the same as that of a stroke victim in that she needed to relearn her gross motor skills, including speech. Ironically, this incident happened barely two weeks after she heard Lee and Bob Woodruff speak at her commencement.
Two years later, Bailey has regained most of her motor skills and easily walks with the aid of a cane. She still has some physical and speech therapy, and any one of her classmates who may have seen her over the course of these two difficult years, particularly Jess, can certainly see the amazing progress she has achieved as her brain continues to heal.


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