A former Shriners Children’s patient who went on to work for the nonprofit healthcare system is setting an inspiring example for the kids she treats.
Jillian Elwart, a prosthetist at Shriners Children’s Shreveport, will be competing in this year’s 2024 Paralympics in Paris in August and September.
The amputee athlete is competing in the paracanoe/kayak sprint, a fast-paced head-to-head race which requires tremendous strength and technique, in hopes of bringing home a gold medal for the United States.
Born with proximal femoral focal deficiency, Elwart is an above-the-knee amputee and received treatment from Shriners Children’s from the time she was 3 years old until she was an adult. However, her journey with Shriners Children’s didn’t end there. After going through school, residency and board exams, Elwart became a certified prosthetist at Shriners Children’s Shreveport, the very same facility where she received treatment growing up.
“It is nice to be able to serve the population that allowed me to have the childhood that I had,” Elwart said. “Being a prosthetist at Shriners Children’s is very rewarding because I’m getting to create devices that help kids do the things they love. At first, I don’t tell the children I’m treating that I also have a prosthesis. I let them figure it out. When they do realize it, they look at their parents and you see the realization on their face as they say, ‘She has a prosthesis, too.’ I want them to know that anything is possible.”