News Release

Cedars-Sinai Medical Top Tips 09/11/98

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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National Rehabilitation Week: 27-Year-Old Tetraplegic (Quadriplegic) Regains Ability To Walk Less Than 4 Months After Catastrophic Auto Accident

In The Past Year, Life Has Changed Dramatically For Ana Aguilar, Who Turned 28 On Labor Day. Her Husband Died Of Cancer In November, 1997, And The Following April, She Was Paralyzed From The Neck Down In A Catastrophic Auto Accident. However, This Highly Motivated Mother Of Two-Preschoolers Has Defied All Medical Odds And Is Walking Again -- Thanks To Her Own Determination And An Inter-Disciplinary Team Approach Used By Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Rehabilitation Department.

Interviews: Ana Aguilar, Patient; Richard Riggs, M.D., Chair, Cedars-Sinai Department Of Physical Medicine And Rehabilitation

Healthy Aging Month: How Many Independent, Live-On-Their-Own 102-Year-Olds Do You Know?

With The "Graying" Of American Comes The Realization That Quality Of Life Is Just As Important As An Extended Length Of Life. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Lifeline Program Provides Seniors With A Continuum Of Care, Emergency Assistance, Peace Of Mind And The Ability To Maintain Their Dignity Through Independence. More Than 600 Seniors Are Served By Cedars-Sinai's Lifeline Program.

Interview: Beverly Freed, Lifeline Program Coordinator; Rose Bolitin, Age 102, Lifeline Subscriber; Evelyn Crow, Age 98, Lifeline Subscriber

Cedars-Sinai's "C.O.A.C.H. For Kids" Provides Free Healthcare Services To Homeless Children

Four Days A Week, Doctors, Nurse Practitioners, Nurses, Social Workers And Other Healthcare Professionals From Cedars-Sinai Medical Center "Hit The Road" Aboard A State-Of-The-Art Mobile Medical Unit (Or "Coach"). The C.O.A.C.H. Sets Up In Various Locations To Offer Free Immunizations, Screenings, Health Care And Social Services To Some Of The 500,000 Los Angeles Children Who Live In Poverty. Interns And Residents From The Medical Center's Pediatric Residency Program Are Routinely Rotated Through The C.O.A.C.H. Program.

Interviews:Michele Strode Rigsby, R.N., C.P.N.P., Program Manager And Director Of Clinical Services

National Rehabilitation Week: Hollywood Film Maker Paralyzed In Motorcycle Accident Is Now Walking Again Unaided

Learning To Walk Again Was The Hardest Thing Howard Rutman, A Hollywood Film Maker Ever Did. An Individual With The Types Of Injuries He Sustained In A Motorcycle Accident Last January Would Typically Be Confined To A Wheelchair For Life. But Less Than Six Months After His Last Reconstructive Surgery -- To Pin His Pelvis Back Together -- Rutman Is Walking Again -- Unaided. His Remarkable Recovery Is Largely Due To His Own Tenaciousness, The Surgical Skill Of Michel Levesque, M.D., Director Of Cedars-Sinai'S Neurofunctional Surgery Center, And An Inter-Disciplinary, Problem-Solving Rehabilitation Team Approach.

Interview: Howard Rutman, Patient; Rob Naples, P.T., Physical Therapist

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