
That’s 20-year-old
Adrianna “Addie” Killam, who grew up in West Seattle — graduating from
Our Lady of Guadalupe in 2002,
Holy Names Academy in 2006, then heading to Arizona to go to college at
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical and Engineering University.
Today, she traveled home to Seattle on a plane from Maui - but it was
no tourism flight - it was a “medical lift” so that Addie
could be admitted to the
University of Washington Medical Center for therapy and rehab after a spring-break surfing jaunt left her with a spinal-cord injury. Family friend
Maureen Emerson e-mailed
WSB to help get the word out about Addie’s injury — which
didn’t happen the way you might think after hearing the phrase
“surfing injury” — and her fight to recover, which
she’s chronicling online:
Maureen says lots of people know Addie: “She was an avid Girl
Scout, leading her local troop in cookie sales for several years, she
is an accomplished figure skater, has recently worked at the Denis
Uniform Store, and has lived in West Seattle with her parents, Bob and
Ginger Killam and brother, Andy, all her life.”
Now, as Maureen tells it, Addie is fighting to get
back to a normal life, after the accident in Hawaii on March 19:
“She and her 3 college roommates signed up for a surfing lesson
and she was out on the board for the first time. She came out of the
water relatively soon, having experienced no trouble whatsoever. She
felt a little weird on her way up the beach, but didn’t want to
interrupt her friends’ lesson, so she just sat there trying to
figure out if she was coming down with something or what. Hours later,
she had her friend’s take her to a clinic. She started to feel
numb in her toes. When she called her mom for insurance info and told
her about the numbness, her mom told her to get straight to a hospital.
Later that afternoon, the hospital called Seattle to tell mom that
Addie had a non-traumatic surfing injury known as ‘Surfer’s
Myelopathy’ that affects the spinal cord, resulting in
paralysis.”
Maureen says research revealed this is fairly common in first-time
surfers because of the blood supply to the spinal cord getting cut as
the surfer twists the neck to look back for waves while hyperextending
the back; here’s a Hawaii newspaper article about it.
Good news is, according to Maureen, full recovery is very possible,
but it will take a lot of work: “Addie is heading to the UW
Physical Therapy rehab unit … so we all remain very hopeful.
It’s just a little daunting to think how this will affect her and
her family over the next coming months.”
One thing they’re using to keep family, friends and others
updated is a website that includes journal entries, a guestbook, and
other updates (when a fundraiser is announced, for example, that info
will be on the site). You can find it here: www.caringbridge.org/visit/addiekillam