Friday, January 27, 2006

Oregon and West Virginia

In Oregon, some celebrate the U.S. Supreme Court's refusal to overturn their physician assisted suicide law.

From West Virginia comes this Associated Press story, which I find deeply moving on many levels:

By VICKI SMITH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) -

With a little help, the sole survivor of the Sago Mine disaster stood for the first time since the accident, and puckered his lips when his wife asked for a kiss, doctors said Friday. Randal McCloy Jr., 26, came out of a coma earlier this week.

"In this business of taking care of severe head injuries, little things make us happy," Dr. Julian Bailes said.

McCloy can make noises when doctors cover his breathing tube. Whether he will be able to speak when the tube is removed depends on the extent of the brain damage he suffered from carbon monoxide during his 41 hours trapped underground, Bailes said.

Twelve fellow miners died after the explosion Jan. 2.

Doctors described McCloy as being within "moments if not hours from death" when he arrived at West Virginia University's Ruby Memorial Hospital on Jan. 4.

On Thursday, he was transferred to a rehabilitation center. He stood for the first time that day with help from medical aides, and later puckered his lips when his wife, Anna, asked for a kiss, said Dr. Russell Biundo, medical director at HealthSouth Mountain View hospital in Morgantown.

"There is definitely a better connection with her than anybody else," Biundo said. "What we all want is a connection so that when I say, `Lift one finger,' he does it. Boom, then we have a party."

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