Flesh-Eating Disease Victim Aimee Copeland Goes Outside for First Time - East Idaho News
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Flesh-Eating Disease Victim Aimee Copeland Goes Outside for First Time

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abc aimee copeland dm 120626 wg?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1340716399093ABC News(AUGUSTA, Ga.) — Aimee Copeland, the Georgia student recovering from a flesh-eating disease, went outside for the first time in 49 days, her father wrote on his blog Monday.  

After several surgeries to remove her limbs, the 24-year-old’s condition was upgraded from “serious” to “good.”

For a patient’s status to change from serious to good, vital signs must be stable and within normal limits.  The patient is conscious and comfortable, and indicators are excellent, the hospital reported.

Copeland, who had been working on a thesis about nature therapy, was wheeled outside of Doctors Hospital in Augusta on Saturday, where her parents snapped a photo of her.

“Aimee has a beauty in this photograph that I think goes beyond words,” said Andy Copeland, her father.  “It’s a beauty of survival, of resilience.”

Copeland has been keeping a blog about his daughter’s fight, and says the sun has returned to her life.

“The look on Aimee’s face was just incredible,” said Copeland.  “She could smell the pine trees and feel the breeze through her hair and just the sun on her skin.  That was a remarkable change for her just to see how she glowed when we took her outside.”

Copeland’s father tells ABC News that she might be able to leave the hospital in a week, but she still has much recovery ahead of her.  It will not be the life she imagined, he says, but he is in awe of her sunny outlook.

“She said she likes that fact that she has a challenge and she feels the challenge will create a tremendous opportunity not just for her to learn more and to gain more from this, but to learn more that she can use to help others along the way,” says Copeland.

Aimee Copeland cut open her calf in a fall from a homemade zipline near the Little Tallapoosa River on May 1.  The wound became infected by a common bacteria that spread in her body and claimed her left leg, right foot and hands.  Doctors also removed part of her torso.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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