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Starlit Shines in Rehabilitation

When a growth spurt made walking harder, rehabilitation kept her moving.

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Starlit benefits from a team of Shriners Children's specialists

Shriners Children's specialists go beyond doctors and nurses. Therapists, including recreational therapists, worked together to help Starlit reach her full potential.

starlit eating ice cream

Snow delicious. When a snowstorm hit Chicago, Amanda, Starlit's recreational therapist got creative and got Starlit to work on her balance and using her right hand. They made snow ice cream together with fresh snow gathered from the hospital backyard. Starlit said the sweet treat was "delicious."

starlit outside on adaptive bike

This special bike is one of Starlit's favorite things! She got it on her seventh birthday through a program managed by Shriners Children's Chicago recreational therapy.

Watch Starlit in PT. “Don’t Touch The Cone!”

Physical Therapists work with each child to reach their individual treatment goals. See Starlit play one of her favorite games in physical therapy.
View Transcript

Speaker 1: Can you go in a rainbow? Let me fix them so they're a rainbow for you. Ready? It's a surprise where the cone goes, you got to start walking. Ah! Don't touch the cone! Oh my goodness, look at you go. 

The Best Birthday Present

Bike riding can help patients with cerebral palsy increase muscle tone and keep up with their siblings. WIFR News 23 explains how 7-year-old Starlit received the perfect birthday gift...an adaptive bike provided through a program from our recreational therapy department. The Special Bikes for Special Kids program awarded 9 bikes this year to selected families who applied back in the Spring. Starlit's bicycle just happened to be delivered right in time for her birthday fun. Starlit has cerebral palsy and weakness on her right side which means she can't ride a traditional bicycle. But now she can enjoy riding with her friends and family! The adaptive bikes are customized by Project Mobility for each child's size and ability.
View Transcript

Speaker 1: Today, it's a seventh birthday that a Machesney Park girl will never forget. Young Starlit shined bright with her new birthday present, an adaptive bike.

Stephanie Hause...: Say, "Here I come!"

Starlit Hauser ...: Here I come!

Speaker 4: So cute. Starlet Hauser Thomas has cerebral palsy, who's always dreamed of riding a bike, but due to weakness on the right side of her body, she can't ride a traditional bike. But the nonprofit Special Bikes for Special Kids teamed up with the Chicago Shriners hospital to make Starlit's birthday wish come true. They worked with a bicycle supplier called Project Mobility, giving the Hauser family an adaptive bike free of charge.

Stephanie Hause...: It gives her a lot more independence to be able to move on her own, groove on her own, and ride on her own now, right? Right, Starlit?

Starlit Hauser ...: It is bright.

Stephanie Hause...: She's been looking forward to it for so long and this bicycle will really help for her to get her exercise and stretch her hamstrings, and just get back out there a little more often.

Speaker 1: Since the start of the Special Bikes Program in 2011, the Chicago Shriners hospital has purchased 71 adaptive bikes for patients like Starlit, costing more than $200,000. So sweet.

Speaker 4: Yeah, and Starlit did have to pick and choose her time to bike ride. She got some bike ride again today, but she couldn't do it all the time today because of the weather.


Child Life Specialists Support Patients

A Child Life Specialist helped distract Starlit when she received injections to make her muscles less tight and increase movement. Later the pair had fun during a child life appointment. Starlit rode circles around Jamie! #childlife #cerebralpalsy
View Transcript

Speaker 1: Yep.

Speaker 2: Boo. Okay, ready? One, two, three, boo.

Excellence in care

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Next Steps

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