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Originally Posted by San Antonio-Express News
"So far 839 U.S. troops have come back from the war zone missing an arm or a leg. Some of them are double amputees. A few have lost three limbs. Hundreds more have been burned. Plenty of GIs have suffered both, thanks to improvised explosive devices and suicide car bombers."
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The state of the art new
Center for the Intrepid rehabilitation facility, and two more
Fisher House living centers for injured soldiers' families, opened yesterday at Brooke Army Medical Center (BAMC) here in San Antonio, Texas. The facilities serve the burn and amputee populations returning from Iraq and Afghanistan (
more).
A young soldier, Ty Ziegel, that my parents' neighbor (a BAMC nurse) worked with during his extensive 18-month recovery at BAMC is photographed in two of the Express-News
photos from Monday's dedication ceremonies. The first photo (#3), shows him seated next to Senator John McKain and Senator Hillary Clinton, the other (#15) shows him seated with his wife. Their story was featured several months ago by both
Time Magazine and the
Oprah Winfrey Show (the
Time article's worth seeking out; the
Oprah coverage was minimal and seemed out-of-place.)
The new facilities were privately funded by citizens through the
Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund and
Fisher House Foundation, and corporate sponsors such as San Antonio's own Randolph-Brooks Federal Credit Union and
USAA. Upon completion of construction, the U.S. government, through the Army and the Veteran's Administration, runs the facilities.
The Center For the Intrepid facility offers our injured soldiers state-of-the-art rehabilitiation, including: a full size rock climbing wall (for rebuilding upper body strength, and confidence), a wave pool (for therapeutic value, recreation, etc.,) and a 360-degree Virtual Reality (VR) area for working on balance and other skills.
Sadly, there is already talk of
when we will need another such center to handle the never-ending flow of newly injured amputees and burn victims -- most of them casualties from Iraq's prevalent IEDs.
Read more on CNN.com about the
Center For the Intrepid opening.
CNN.com also offers
more photos from the grand opening.
God Bless our Troops!