![]() “And if we hadn’t persevered, Hannah would be a disabled person for life.” ![]() ![]() “That was the hardest part, feeling like there was no hope,” Tracy said of the months before they connected with Eriksson. Instead of a life of pain, barely holding down a minimum wage job, the entire world opened up to her. After college, she’d like to pursue a career in federal law enforcement.īut none of that would be possible if Tracy and Hannah hadn’t found MUSC Health’s Evert Eriksson, M.D., they said.Īfter months of being told there was nothing to be done for Hannah’s unhealed broken rib, which left her in so much pain every second of the day that she couldn’t complete basic tasks like reaching down to unload the dishwasher, Eriksson performed a rib fixation surgery, attaching a titanium plate to the rib to hold it in place so it could finally heal. Hannah Campbell, 18, set off from Tennessee to Colorado in January to embark on a Christian gap-year program where she expects to grow spiritually and physically – she'll be learning to ski and plans to work as a camp counselor in the mountains over the summer. Tracy Campbell’s little girl is all grown up and leaving home.
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