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    Exploring 
        North Carolina Recuperation Barrens 
         
                 On 
        a spring day in 1969 Gary Lewis, laboriously rolling his wheelchair along 
        the sidewalk in Greenville, faced a doubtful and depressing future. He 
        was returning from a long stay in a Veterans Administration hospital. 
        Since he was merely disabled from an automobile accident that left his 
        legs paralyzed, but was not an alcoholic, not blind, deaf, mentally ill, 
        retarded, or a convicted criminal, there was no place he could go in North 
        Carolina where any public agency would help him prepare himself in any 
        comprehensive way to earn his familys daily bread. The most he could 
        hope for at the time was a job in a sheltered workshop, where he might 
        frame pictures, refinish furniture, or do someother work for a minimum 
        or sub-minimum wage.  
         
                   Before the 
        1970s, North Carolina possessed several hospital-based units where orthopedists 
        provided physical restoration. Gary had gone through all the orthopedic 
        surgery that would do him any good. He could have found in one of the 
        16 district offices of the states Vocational Rehabilitation Agencya 
        division established in 1920 in the Department of Public Instructiona 
        counselor to give him individual counseling, with some support from private 
        physicians and psychologists. There were also 90 cooperative facilities 
        and programs in hospitals, mental health clinics, and sheltered workshops. 
        The cooperative programs ranged from one-man counseling services to large 
        residential units in university and psychiatric hospitals, sanatoriums, 
        correctional facilities, and social service departments. None provided 
        a full spectrum of rehabilitation assistance that would lead Gary back 
        to where he could function as a productive adult. 
         
                  In nearby 
        states he could have found his way to the Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation 
        Center at Fishersville, Virginia, or the West Virginia Rehabilitation 
        Center at Institute, near Charleston. In six other states in the country 
        he could have availed himself of extensive services in diversified centers 
        dedicated to vocational rehabilitation. 
         
                  The Smith-Sears 
        Veterans Vocational Rehabilitation Act in 1918 established the first federal 
        vocational rehabilitation program. In 1920, Congress passed the Fess-Smith 
        Civilian Vocational Rehabilitation Act extending the program to non-veterans. 
        Not until Congress amended the Vocational Rehabilitation Act in 1954, 
        authorizing grants to expand programs for people with physical disabilities, 
        did the N.C. Rehabilitation Agency receive limited authority to use its 
        resources for rehabilitation centers. Until the early 1960s, federal funds 
        were very limited, and were used almost entirely to assist individuals. 
        Between 1960 and 1970, federal appropriations for vocational rehabilitation 
        grew from about $50 million to more than $550 million, opening new opportunities 
        to provide service and facilities for disabled persons not previously 
        considered as candidates for rehabilitation. Through 1967, the mentally 
        retarded and mentally ill were given priority, with facilities being set 
        up at all the state operated mental health institutions. Beyond this, 
        about 35 community sheltered workshops were established. 
         
                  Following 
        further amendments to the federal Rehabilitation Acts of 1965 and 1968, 
        services were expanded to people suffering from stroke, heart problems, 
        respiratory conditions, nervous system damage, and orthopedic problems. 
        The state Vocational Rehabilitation Agency set up a planning and development 
        section that surveyed the existing rehabilitation facilities, identifying 
        sites in Asheville, Winston-Salem, Chapel Hill, and Durham where programs 
        serving severely physically disabled patients might be expanded. The survey 
        found no substantial rehabilitation programs east of Raleigh. 
         
        Following the survey, the agency formed a plan to establish a state-wide 
        system of regional centers expanding the existing facilities and developing 
        additional ones, especially in eastern North Carolina. A two-year study 
        in vocational rehabilitation, completed in December 1968, recommended 
        setting up comprehensive centers to rehabilitate persons suffering from 
        serious multiple disabilities. 
         
                  The General 
        Assembly in House Bill 1320, effective July 1, 1969, appropriated funds 
        and requested the State Board of Education to study the states needs 
        for comprehensive vocational rehabilitation centers, and to begin planning 
        to set up such centers in chosen locations. These centers were to emphasize 
        medical, psychological, social, and vocational assistance to help persons 
        with physical handicaps live productively in their communities. The boards 
        final report, with recommendations for designing, locating, and equipping 
        facilities for the handicapped, was to be completed and presented to the 
        governor and the 1971 General Assembly. 
         
                  According 
        to the May 19, 1970 Daily Reflector, Eugene R. Keener, state program planning 
        supervisor with the N.C. Division of Vocational Rehabilitation, had already 
        said that a recommendation would be presented to the General Assembly 
        in July in favor of locating a rehabilitation center in Greenville. Goldsboro 
        and Wilson had also bid for location of the center, and both cities offered 
        buildings and building sites. Asheville had offered Thoms Rehabilitation 
        Hospital, lock, stock, and barrel, for a regional facility. 
         
                  A new building 
        would have to be built in Greenville, but the justification for locating 
        a regional rehabilitation center in Greenville was solid. It satisfied 
        all the criteria the committee had set up: central location in eastern 
        North Carolina; a nearby large hospital, which Pitt County Memorial Hospital 
        would be once its new construction was completed; existing rehabilitation 
        manpower and training programs for such manpower; local organizations 
        to provide financial and personnel support; a four-year university, with 
        a medical school proposed for biennium 1971-73, and the potential for 
        being barrier-free; a local community college; existing rehabilitation 
        facilities, such as the Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center established in 
        Pitt County in 1965; and a local sheltered workshop. The rehabilitation 
        counseling, occupational therapy, speech pathology and audiology, psychology, 
        nursing, sociology, and anthropology, medical technology, physical therapy, 
        social work, and other training programs available at ECU were further 
        points that favored locating the center in Greenville. 
         
                  ECU administration 
        announced in May 1970 that the university might provide some funds if 
        the hospital bond issue passed, to ensure access to community facilities 
        for teaching. The Division of Vocational Rehabilitation might help, and 
        there might be funds from other private and public sources. Donations, 
        grants, or other funding would decrease the $9 million in bonds that would 
        have to be sold. 
         
                  Despite the 
        early recommendation of the vocational rehabilitation divisions 
        assistant director, there were still many barriers  political, financial, 
        and architectural  to be eliminated. 
         
                  When the study 
        and report were issued, they emphasized the centers comprehensive 
        nature. It would be an environment in which people from different health 
        professions would interact with disabled persons, giving them the assistance 
        they needed to achieve fully productive lives in their communities. 
         
                  Because there 
        was no comprehensive vocational rehabilitation center in the state, the 
        Division of Vocational Rehabilitation staff and a 24-member State Advisory 
        Committee on Rehabilitation Facilities created to carry out the study 
        visited the best centers in some other states, and consulted with governmental 
        and voluntary agency leaders.  
      Irrigating 
        the Desert 
                 Dr. 
        Edwin H. Martinat, an orthopedic surgeon from Bowman-Gray medical school, 
        was named committee chairman. Two committee members were appointed from 
        Greenville: Sheldon C. Downes, Ed. D., coordinator of rehabilitation counselor 
        education in the ECU School of Education; and Edwin W. Monroe, M. D., 
        dean of the ECU School of Allied Health Professions. The other 21 members 
        were from Asheville, Butner, Chapel Hill, Charlotte, Durham, Fayetteville, 
        Goldsboro, Laurinburg, Raleigh, Wilson, and Winston-Salem. 
         
                  In Greenville, 
        interested persons formed the Rehabilitation Center Committtee in late 
        1970 and early 1971 to support locating a regional rehabilitation center 
        in the city. The committee members included H. E.(Sonny) Lowry, 
        who was chairman, Sheldon Downes, George Hamilton, Joe Pou, William Speight, 
        Ralph Steele, and Richard Wells. The local medical community was represented 
        by Drs. Earl Trevathan, James F. Bowman, Sellars Crisp, Al Ferguson, Ira 
        Hardy, Monroe (later replaced by Ronald Thiele), Allen Taylor, and John 
        Wooten. Members of the local committee met with R. T. Capt. Tim 
        Brinn of the ECU Regional Development Institute to document, in a 72-page 
        brochure, Greenvilles case for establishing a regional rehabilitation 
        center in Pitt County. The main text included facsimiles of letters from 
        officials, community organizations, businessmen and professionals supporting 
        the concept of the rehabilitation center. The committee raised enough 
        money to print individualized, named copies of the book to present to 
        local supporters, Gov. Robert W. Scott, and all the legislators who would 
        act on the eventual location of the center. 
         
                  Bill Speight, 
        Pitt County attorney, went to the governors office along with other 
        members of the committee. He found Scott unsmiling and not very friendly, 
        and when he presented him with Greenvilles plan, the governor said, 
        You people in Greenville just got approved for a medical school. 
        What more do you want?  
         
                  It must be 
        added that Gov. Scott shifted to a more favorable position after Greenvilles 
        rehab center proponents combined with those from Fayetteville in their 
        joint campaign. In the meantime, state Senators J. J. Harrington, John 
        Hensley, Kenneth Royall, and Vernon White, and state Representatives Sam 
        Bundy and Horton Rountree had spoken to him about the economic and other 
        advantages of having a vocational rehabilitation center in Greenville. 
        The governor wrote on June 3, 1971 to Vernon Cox, chairman of the Pitt 
        County Commissioners, Please be assured of my concern for such a 
        worthy program, and my sincere hope that, if sufficient funds are found 
        to be available, the appropriations bill for these centers can be ratified. 
        I feel the humanitarian and economic benefits of the two rehabilitation 
        facilities for the east, advanced planning for a state rehabilitation 
        institute at Chapel Hill, and rehabilitation counseling units for general 
        hospital patients in western, central, and eastern North Carolina deserve 
        full consideration by the 1971 General Assembly. 
         
                  On June 7, 
        Dr. Ira Hardy, as spokesman for the Greenville committee, visited Douglas 
        Herring, State Board of Education chairman, and presented arguments to 
        the board for Greenville as the ideal location for a center.  
         
                  The main question 
        discussed at the start was whether or not there should be a single central 
        location, like the Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center in Virginia, the 
        West Virginia Rehabilitation Center, and the Warm Springs Foundation in 
        Georgia, or regional centers placed strategically across the state. The 
        committee decided in favor of multiple regional centers. 
         
                  The various 
        committee members vigorously represented their own areas interests. 
        Dr. John McCain was staunchly in favor of locating a center at the unused 
        Eastern North Carolina Sanatorium in Wilson, a state-owned 160-170-bed 
        hospital. He was supported in the endeavor by Rufus Swain of Wilson County 
        Technical Institute, who also spoke about Atlantic Christian College with 
        its B. A. programs in nursing, medical technology, and deaf education. 
         
                  Dr. Robert 
        Brashear, Jr., from UNC School of Medicines Division of Orthopedic 
        Surgery and Robert A. Lassiter, Ph. D., of the School of Education at 
        UNC, declared firmly, although they were not quite prepared to define 
        the exact site, that Chapel Hill deserved most of all to be the location 
        of a state rehabilitation institute, since it was so centrally located, 
        had the UNC and Duke University medical schools to draw onfailing 
        to mention that the sole rehabilitation facility at Chapel Hill was a 
        single ward in Memorial Hospital, or that the campus was nowhere near 
        barrier-free. Moreover, Ferebee Taylor, UNC chancellor, had ruled that 
        the university had already made adequate arrangements for handicapped 
        students, would not alter its admission policy in any way as a concession 
        to handicapped applicants, nor spoil its beautiful campus by providing 
        ramps and other facilities for the handicapped. 
         
                  Members of 
        the rehabilitation advisory committee, accompanied by Dr. George Hamilton, 
        Larry Snyder, and Sheldon Downes from ECU, visited the campus of the University 
        of Illinois campus in Champaign, IL, which was a pioneer, having been 
        barrier-free since the 1950s; the Rancho Los Amigos Hospital in Downey, 
        CA, and Casa Colina Hospital for Rehabilitation Medicine, in Pomona, CA; 
        Craig Rehabilitation Hospital in Denver, CO; and four other centers in 
        Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia. On the basis of these visits, 
        and advice from their administrators, medical directors, and staff, and 
        other experts on rehabilitation facilities, the advisory committee developed 
        an Ideal Model for a Comprehensive Statewide System of Rehabilitation 
        Services for the Physically Disabled in North Carolina. 
         
                  The ideal 
        model, presented in the committees final report, included a variety 
        of rehabilitation services at the  local, 
        regional, and state levels:  
         
                  1. Locally, 
        there should be hospital rehabilitation units, mobile hospital units, 
        and vocational rehabilitation     evaluation 
        and service centers where district offices already existed. 
                  2. Regionally, 
        comprehensive vocational rehabilitation centers should be set up in conjunction 
        with large      general, 
        acute hospitals, to deal with patients for whom local facilities were 
        insufficient.  
                  3. To serve 
        the entire state, there should be a state rehabilitation institute to 
        serve physically handicapped               persons 
        for whom regional facilities would be inadequate, and a state rehabilitation 
        center for the deaf. 
         
                  Public hearings 
        were mounted in Asheville, Charlotte, Durham, Greensboro, Greenville, 
        and Raleigh during November 1970. There was one curious and unexplained 
        incident. The tapes made on the several recorders at the Greenville hearing 
        could not be transcribed because all were blank. It was as if the hearing 
        had never occurred. 
         
                  In Raleigh 
        on January 7, 1971 presentations were made by Fayetteville, Pinehurst, 
        Greenville, and Wilson. 
         
                  After all 
        the hearings and presentations, a consultant was brought in from the University 
        of Virginia in Charlottesville to provide unbiased outside advice on the 
        decision where to locate the center. Since there were no transcripts of 
        the public hearing in Greenville, he took the statement of John McCain, 
        chairman of the Central Coastal Plain Health Planning Council located 
        in Wilson, as definitive for eastern North Carolina, and recommended that 
        the center be located there. 
         
                  The situation 
        was seen by the Greenville group to be at an acute stage. They had to 
        do something to retrieve their preeminent position. They sought a political 
        answer. At the time the General Assembly members from the Fayetteville 
        area were more influential than those from the Pitt County area. Committee 
        members approached the Fayetteville representatives and suggested that 
        they combine their forces. If you support us, well support 
        you, they said, to ensure that regional centers were located in 
        both Fayetteville and Greenville. 
       
        A Regional Rehabilitation Center for Greenville 
                 The 
        alliance succeeded, and the final report of the State Board of Education 
        proposed that two regional centers should be established in Fayetteville 
        and Greenville, funded through a combination of federal, state, and local 
        funds. Drawing on Vocational Rehabilitation and Hill-Burton funds, the 
        federal participation for new construction could be as much as 61 percent. 
        The remaining 39 percent would include 24 percent state funds and 15 percent 
        local funds. The regional centers would operate through their local county 
        governments, with the state sharing in their cost on the same basis as 
        that for funding regional mental health facilities. 
         
                  The community 
        components of the centers, operating in affiliated universities, community 
        colleges, and sheltered workshops, would involve removing architectural 
        barriers and employing special project staff. Federal Vocational Rehabilitation 
        funds could be used for barrier removal at technical institutes and community 
        colleges. Staff costs, which would amount to about 65 to 70 percent of 
        the operating budget, would be funded by colleges and universities, using 
        local and state funds, by technical institutes and communities colleges, 
        utilizing funds matched with federal vocational education funds, and by 
        sheltered workshops using existing staff or, if needed, additional staff 
        paid from vocational rehabilitation funds. 
         
                  The estimated 
        total cost for constructing and equipping a regional rehabilitation center 
        in Greenville would be about $1.8 million, and estimated annual operating 
        costs would be $1.25 million. 
        It was essential for the ECU campus to be barrier free. The first phase 
        of removing architectural obstacles on the campus was estimated by the 
        Division of Vocational Rehabilitation to cost $50,000, and they were prepared 
        to furnish $40,000. ECU administrators were no more unified than usual. 
        Jim Lowry, director of Buildings and Grounds, resisted any architectural 
        changes to improve access to campus facilities. Dr. Downes, representing 
        the Greenville committee, approached Cliff Moore, the universitys 
        financial manager. Moore told him that there were no funds to pay for 
        barrier removal. 
         
                  To stop here 
        would have left the project dead in the water, so Downes went to President 
        Jenkins and explained the situation. All the work that the committee had 
        done would be lost if the essential requirement to remove all architectural 
        barriers were not satisfied. It did not hurt that Downes, who was a Marine 
        as was Jenkins, could talk the talk and walk the walk. Jenkins responded 
        positively, saying that the issue was bigger than just the regional center. 
        The universitys goal was to serve all the people in the region, 
        and it would be inexcusable if physically handicapped students were prevented 
        from attending classes and other university functions. 
         
                  He made a 
        telephone call to Moore, and the $10,000 was immediately available. Several 
        months later, following a 20 percent/80 percent formula, the university 
        provided another $10,000 to match an additional $40,000 to complete removing 
        architectural barriers. Even with the funds available, it was only through 
        the strong support of the university engineer, Larry Snyder, who for the 
        necessary length of time managed to circumvent the interference of Jim 
        Lowry, his supervisor, that the required changes in campus accessibility 
        were brought about. 
         
                  The 1971 General 
        Assembly authorized $1.9 million to construct the rehabilitation center 
        at PCMH to open around Easter 1977. The section of the hospital containing 
        the center would become the final center in a system of five regional 
        centers and one state institute. With the systems completion, anyone 
        in the state would be able to begin rehabilitation care within 75 to 100 
        miles of home. 
        On October 11, 1971, the Pitt County commissioners passed a resolution 
        to expand the hospital by establishing a Regional Rehabilitation Center 
        as part of the new PCMH. The commissioners promised $881,000 toward constructing 
        the 55-bed rehabilitation center, the balance to be provided from federal 
        and state rehabilitation grants. 
         
                  The ground-breaking 
        ceremony to inaugurate construction of the new Pitt County Memorial Hospital 
        was held on Thursday, February 14, 1974, Valentines Day. The facility 
        on Stantonsburg Road was to include a 315-bed acute care hospital and 
        a 55-bed regional rehabilitation center, and was scheduled for completion 
        in September 1977. R.L. Bob Martin, chairman of the county 
        commissioners, said the new facility would tie in with developing the 
        ECU medical school. 
         
                  Dr. Edgar 
        T. Beddingfield, Jr., a Wilson physician who was very active in campaigning 
        for the medical school at ECU, spoke on January 7, 1971, to the final 
        Raleigh meeting before the State Board of Education. After reviewing the 
        reasons why Wilson should be the site for a regional center rather than 
        Greenville, he said, In closing, I must confess that in observing 
        your current and perhaps justified predilection for the Greenville location, 
        I feel a bit like the ever-faithful but rejected lover, who on seeing 
        his girl friend cast him aside and go on to a new relationship with another 
        man, told her plaintively, Honey, I still love you just the same. 
        If this new affair that you have become involved in doesnt work 
        out, come on backIll be waiting. So, Ladies and Gentlemen, 
        if the limitations of funds available, or other factors throw a roadblock 
        in the development of the facility at any other site than Wilson, we want 
        to remind you that we will be there waiting and ready to go at your pleasure. 
        Thank you very much. 
         
                   By 1995, 
        12 rehabilitation centers for the physically disabled had been established, 
        including those in Fayetteville and Greenville. The others were in Asheville, 
        Charlotte, Winston-Salem (the John C. Whitaker Regional Rehabilitation 
        Center and the Rehabilitation Center at North Carolina Baptist Hospital), 
        Greensboro, Raleigh, Hickory, Chapel Hill, Durham, and Wilmington. 
      The 
        First Three Directors 
         
                The 
        first director of the Regional Rehabilitation Center was Dave McRae, who 
        came from Raleigh, where he was directing a nursing home and attending 
        graduate school. It was an inside joke among some PCMH staff that McRae 
        had been Jack Richardsons second choice for the position. Richardson 
        had in mind a man who came from eastern North Carolina, but was persuaded 
        that he needed someone with more of a professional background than his 
        favorite candidate.  
         
                  McRae started 
        in March 1976 as associate director for rehabilitation. Like the other 
        executives at PCMH at the time, he found himself doing whatever had to 
        be done. The challenges were great, but the situation was conducive to 
        learning a great deal about the hospitals operation, as problems 
        and crises arose and had to be met. During the 13 years he spent in administration, 
        he had six or seven different jobs, and had become familiar with virtually 
        every area of managing the hospital. 
         
                  The approach 
        to rehabilitation at the PCMH center was unique in that it not only made 
        facilities more easily available, but provided complete patient care, 
        dealing with the real problems faced by the disabled. Through being near 
        the patients homes and families, it could make a difference in their 
        feelings, how they viewed the world, and their motivation to learn what 
        they needed in order to function. As McRae said, Because of the 
        extent of their problems, you dont treat just the patient. Rehabilitation 
        involves being into the community. 
         
                  The center 
        mobilized an entire community to help disabled people learn to function 
        in real life, not separating the person for long periods of time from 
        his home and people. 
         
                  McRae directed 
        the rehabilitation center until Deborah Davis, after working for him for 
        several years, assumed the position. She joined his staff after working 
        in materials services, in the basement of the Fifth Street hospital. She 
        was also still in graduate school. Her first task was to prepare for CARF 
        to review the rehabilitation operation with an eye to accreditation. It 
        took about a year to get ready for the accreditation review. During that 
        period and for a time afterward, Mrs. Davis worked to complete her masters 
        in business administration. 
         
                  She also worked 
        with McRae after he moved to the Human Resosurces division, then taking 
        on clinical services, and gradually moving into overseeing daily operations. 
        In 1990 she was senior vice president with responsibility for the entire 
        operation of PCMH  patient services, clinical operations, support 
        services, and facilities. Everything for the daily operations for 
        PCMH reports, through an executive staff member, to me, she said. 
         
         
                  After Mrs. 
        Davis, Martha M. Dixon became the rehabilitation centers director. 
        She had been employed in the center in 1977 as its first speech and language 
        pathologist. The next year, she became the manager of the Department of 
        Speech Language Pathology and Audiology at the hospital, a position she 
        held for several years. Then she took on responsibility for rehabilitations 
        services as a senior manager, administrator, and assistant vice president 
        for the Regional Rehabilitation Center. In January 1997, she became the 
        vice president of general services for PCMH. 
         
                  On its 20th 
        anniversary, September 16, 1997, the Regional Rehabilitation Center at 
        PCMH opened its new aquatic therapy pool with a dedication ceremony and 
        an open house to which the public was invited. The $1.6 million pool had 
        been envisioned since the center opened. It had been designed and built 
        after surveying 12 other aquatic therapy facilities across the country. 
        The Greenville Service League supported the pools construction with 
        a $300,000 gift. 
         
                  The pools 
        water temperature would be kept between 90 and 94 degrees, and the air 
        temperature inside the building that housed the pool 2 to 3 degrees warmer 
        than the water. 
         
                  There were 
        recreational, physical, and occupational therapists on the Rehabilitation 
        Center staff who would lead aquatic therapy. Having the pool allowed them 
        to expand the swim therapy program that had been carried on at the Greenville 
        Aquatics and Fitness Center pool. Being able to use the rehabilitation 
        center pool would help both outpatients and inpatients with complications 
        resulting from stroke, spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries, 
        and arthritis. 
         
                  In April, 
        1999, the Commission for the Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities 
        granted the Regional Rehabilitation Center at PCMH, along with the centers 
        six specialized rehabilitation programs, a three year re-accreditation. 
        The most recent previous accreditation had been in 1995. The center was 
        evaluated on its comprehensive inpatient rehabilitation program and vocational 
        evaluation services, as well as on its specialty programs in pediatric, 
        brain injury, and spinal cord injury rehabilitation. The centers 
        speech-language pathology and audiology services were accredited also 
        by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association as part of the CARF 
        survey process. 
         
                  The rehabilitation 
        center was commended for communication among staff, physicians, and administrators, 
        for its patient satisfaction level, the expertness of its staff and medical 
        staff, and its facilities, particularly the aquatic therapy pool. Areas 
        needing improvement were arranging information in order of priority, managing 
        outcomes, and streamlining daily patient care documentation. 
         
                  Dr. Phillip 
        Bryant, the centers medical director and chairman of the Physical 
        Medicine and Rehabilitation department at the ECU medical school, said 
        surveys were valuable in judging how the rehab center stood in relation 
        to established benchmarks. He said, It allows us to get a better 
        understanding of standards we should be achieving and helps us continue 
        our pursuit of excellence in rehabilitation.  
         
                  Gary Lewis, 
        more than 50 years old in 2000, has made great progress since he left 
        the VA Hospital. He was fortunate to obtain work in the sheltered workshop 
        in Pitt County, and when the Regional Rehabilitation Center opened he 
        began therapy for his disabled legs and learned office skills. He works 
        as office manager for an engineering firm in Greenville and attends ViQuest 
        Center, where the University Health Systems carries on its wellness programs, 
        twice a week. There he exercises in the pool, is given physical therapy, 
        and uses the cardiovascular and training equipment to benefit his heart 
        and upper body. As evidence of the centers impact, people like Gary 
        can live in Greenville, while receiving comprehensive rehabilitation services 
        and lifelong help in keeping well, without having to leave home.  | 
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