Transformative, Life Changing Care
Emmy said her first visit with sports medicine orthopedic surgeon Brian Haus, M.D., was a relief.
“Dr. Haus spent hours reviewing my charts. He didn’t take my disease lightly. He said, ‘I don’t see anything wrong, but you are in pain, so I want to do exploratory surgery,’” Emmy said.
That surgery was supposed to take 30 minutes, but Dr. Haus discovered the previous surgeries had left Emmy with virtually no meniscus. He left the operating room to go talk to Traci and Jake in the waiting area, and recommended corrective surgery on the right knee while Emmy was already under anesthesia. Emmy’s parents agreed and she was in the operating room for another four hours.
Emmy spent a week as an inpatient at Shriners Children’s while on the road to recovery.
“I was feeling really down,” Emmy said. “But then I started working with the physical therapists who made it really fun. They made a really painful experience a really happy one, somehow. And seeing other kids recovering alongside me and watching them get better really helped,” Emmy said. “Not only was my knee getting better, but so was my soul. It was so motivating.”
After a year of ongoing physical therapy to recover from surgery on her right knee, Emmy had her seventh surgery to improve the same issue in her left knee. She spent another week as an inpatient and felt even more at home the second time around, thanks to a compassionate, multidisciplinary care team.
“It’s so weird to say that being at a hospital was a great experience, but it really was,” said Emmy. “Before, I felt like I wasn’t good enough, I was so insecure, but Shriners Children’s taught me that we are all unique, that you should embrace what you have, in a very good way.”
A Dream Come True
Emmy remembers how Shriners Children’s staff would constantly encourage and support her chasing her dreams of dancing again. Emmy recovered from her two surgeries, graduated high school and is now a professional NBA dancer for the Sacramento Kings.
“It feels surreal. I keep pinching myself. I never would have thought I’d be dancing for the NBA,” said Emmy. “The Sacramento Kings Dance Team is very welcoming, and my coach is so understanding of my situation. If the team does a move I can’t do, she creates a move that I can do, the team showcases what I have and embraces it.”
A Bright Future
Emmy will eventually need meniscus transplant surgery, but remains focused on her career as a professional NBA dancer for now. She’s also thinking about how she can give back to Shriners Children’s and the children we serve.
“I wouldn’t be dancing right now without Shriners Children’s, physically or emotionally,” said Emmy. “I’m here because they kept telling me I could dance again. They gave me my life back. It really is such a magical place.”