Special gift for special girl

By

News

December 30, 2010 - 12:00 AM

GAS — Heidi Hibbs is shy and forthright, funny and persnickety — much like any other 6-year-old. But Hibbs has cerebral palsy, along with other medical conditions, that left her unable to walk until she was 4, said her grandmother, Elizabeth Hibbs, who along with her husband, Tony, is raising Heidi.
The Hibbses take Heidi to Kansas City every three months for Botox injections that help her muscles function better, Elizabeth Hibbs said. With other appointments, the Hibbses “are up there five to nine times a year,” Elizabeth Hibbs said.
A year ago, Heidi had a shunt in her brain replaced. A long tube drains fluid to Heidi’s stomach, Hibbs said. And Heidi still receives regular physical therapy through the ANW Cooperative.
That Heidi can do so much is nothing short of a miracle, her grandmother noted.
Born at just 25 weeks, weighing only 1 pound 8 ounces, Heidi “was immediately Life-Flighted from Allen County Hospital to one in Wichita,” where doctors told the family that Heidi “would never walk or talk,” Hibbs said. “She was so little you could see through her,” Hibbs said it seemed.
Heidi is the daughter of Hibbs’ son Jonathan and his girlfriend Sarah Swogger. At the time of her birth, the couple, in their early 20s, were caring for a one-year-old son.
“The stress was too much” for them, Hibbs said. So when Heidi was 14 months old, she went to live with her grandparents, who have cared for her since.
“That first year we had her, we had 95 out-of-town doctor appointments” Hibbs said.
Heidi wears a foot brace and her right hand is almost always coiled into a fist, Hibbs said. She has a brace for that, too, to stretch her fingers, Hibbs said. She also has osteogenesis imperfecta — fragile bones, Hibbs said, and is blind in her left eye.
The combination means Heidi has had difficulty not only learning to walk, but other activities other children her age have already mastered, such as going up and down stairs and riding a tricycle.
Enter Vickie Snavely of ANW, and AMBUCS, a North Carolina-based national service organization that assists individuals with mobility impairments.
Hibbs learned of AMBUCS during a visit to her brother’s in Dodge City about a year and a half ago, she said. At a mall-based health expo, AMBUCS representatives had forms that put Heidi on a wish list for an AmTryke, a specialized tricycle designed with weighted pedals, specially shaped handle bars and other modifications that allow those who cannot ride normal bikes to use the vehicles.
The agency required verification of Heidi’s needs, which is where Snavely came in, Hibbs said, crediting the therapist with filling out necessary forms that resulted in Heidi’s receiving an AmTryke this Christmas.
“Last Wednesday we got ready to go to school and this big ol’ box was outside” the family’s door, Hibbs said. “I brought it in the house and put it under the tree. On it was a big red sticker that said, ‘For Heidi.’”
“It was my trike,” Heidi said.
Snavely had received a call from AMBUCS a few days earlier, letting her know the trike was on its way.
“It was odd,” Hibbs said. She hadn’t heard from the organization between the initial flurry of submitting materials and receiving notice the trike was coming.
But she is grateful.
“This will help with her mobility and being able to be with her peers,” Hibbs said of Heidi, a first-grader at Iola’s McKinley Elementary School. “It will be huge for her.”

Related