CVMC cares about Paris

Colleen’s sister, who was also in town, was complaining of a headache and her father, Paris Fortner, got up to retrieve some headache medicine. That was when the sisters noticed their dad staggering down the hallway.

“He made it back with the medication and tried to say something but it was unintelligible,” Colleen remembered. “He told us that his leg was numb and after 30 minutes had passed, we asked him how he was feeling and what had happened. He shrugged his shoulders and began to cry. My dad is 80 years old and I have never seen him cry.”

Paris could not lift his arm and he could not speak when he arrived at the hospital. It was soon determined that he had a stroke. He was transferred to Catawba Valley Medical Center where he began inpatient rehabilitation, eventually moving to outpatient rehabilitation.

“They’ve been real good,” said Paris. “They are interested in letting me do what I can do and not overworking me. They push you to the limit and they knew what that limit was. The staff is very conscious of my feelings and how to get me to do all I could, while not overdoing it.”

Colleen remembers, “We knew we had a lot of work ahead of us. I was so thankful this hadn’t happened on the way down from Michigan or when they were on the road. We were grateful for a lot of things and I would have done everything exactly the same way.”

After months of rehabilitation, Paris looks at the CVMC staff members as family. “When you get to a position where you can’t help yourself and they treat you like you are their relative, it makes you have a deeper feeling for them than you would any other hospital. If someone treats you like they care, it gives you a better feeling about yourself and tends to perk you up a little a bit.”

Jeremy Frye, PT, DPT, Director, Outpatient Rehabilitation Services, appreciates and agrees with Paris’ assessment. “CVMC is known for many things, such as its excellent nursing care, but spend any time around the rehabilitation departments and you will see that these clinicians are every bit as special. Treatments are centered on the patient and involve physical activities such as therapeutic exercise, balance and gait training, upper extremity motor coordination and functional activities. When you combine hardworking patients like Mr. Fortner and caring therapists like Matt O’Neil, PT, DPT, OCS and Leah Greene, OT/L, CLT and their assistants, great results happen.”

Colleen says her dad will be heading home to Michigan soon, and changes are in store. “He will probably continue to use a walker, but this will bring about other changes. My parents have a two-story house in Michigan and they’re going to have to decide whether to buy a new one-story or, perhaps, move permanently to Catawba County.”

For Dolly, Paris’ wife of 56 years, the experience has taken her from worried to assured. “Not knowing what’s happening, it’s scary. But, the good lord helped us through it all. When something like this happens, you think you can’t do it but you do what you have to do. Even though we have hospitals at home, I just don’t know that he would have gotten the kind of care he got at Catawba. And, now we’re going to be OK.”

Categories