Kevin Everett's story isn't about being shot but it does involve spinal cord injury and potential paralysis and how quick thinking doctors gave him back the ability to walk again. It's not what Ms. Gifford is going through but it's an inspirational story. Hopefully her story will end as well.
Not everything below is in the Wiki page. However, on this subject I trust my memory more because it was three years ago and I read his book and followed the news reports of his treatments religiously.
Kevin Everett was a tight end for the Buffalo Bills. In a game in September 2007 he was playing on special teams and in something that can only be called a one in a billion perfect alignment happened when he collided with Domenick Hixon and fell to the ground barely able to move with a broken neck.
(Hixon was then with the Broncos, BTW it was not an illegal hit. Both guys were textbook tackling it's just freaky. Domenick Hixon felt horrible about the whole thing and during the season he became a NYG and they played Buffalo in the final game of the year for the Bills and he was able to talk to Kevin who was attending the game and feel better.)
[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9SoDPFhT-u8[/ame]
The NFL had been funding a study in cold therapy up until that year when they decided to stop funding the study. IIRC, it was being done at the University of Miami. Ralph Wilson, owner of the Bills, had continued to help fund the study giving $1 million after the NFL cut off funding. Because of this the Bills doctor and training staff were very well versed in the application of this theory. At the time the Bills were one of a handful of teams that kept chilled IV fluids on the ambulances at the stadium. Now I believe they all do.
When I saw the hit Everett was on the ground convulsing and I thought it was no more than him getting the wind knocked out of him, but when they came back from commercial it was evident this was darn serious.
Aboard the ambulance they started administering the cold IV fluids to bring his temperature down. Doctor Cappuccino who was on the ambulance told the ambulance drivers to go to a more distant hospital than the one the Bills typically used.
Miraculously, a week or two before a child had been injured during his son's little league game and needed an MRI. He learned that the hospital closest to the Bills didn't have a 24 hour MRI staff and that it would probably be two to three hours before they could administer an MRI. The hospital he told them to go to had a 24 hour MRI staff and was able to do the MRI immediately. The extra few minutes of travel time saved hours for the doctors and in one of those odd coincidences he wouldn't have known that three weeks before.
They performed surgery on him and things didn't seem to be getting much better. Back then cold therapy was a hotly contested, and maybe still is, theory for treating spinal injuries. I believe the idea is to bring the body temperature down to just above hypothermia which keeps the tissues from swelling and causing further damage. Faced with the negative evidence Dr. Cappuccino and the surgeons debated the cold therapy with Cappuccino being the strongest advocate. Eventually he won and they used the technique. Soon Kevin could wiggle his toes but Cappuccino was highly doubtful he would walk again. Today he is walking around and married to his longtime girlfriend. He proposed to her while still unable to move his limbs and she said yes. If she ever left his side for a moment he'd get upset.
Proudly the Bills fans and just citizens of Buffalo made sure that his family had everything they needed. Evidently the wives of the Bills do some charity works and made sure that there was always somebody with a family member in the waiting room and that the room was stocked with food and/or anything else the family wanted or needed.
When the doctors cleared him they moved him to a hospital in Houston which was closer to his home and they did all the physical therapy there.
A side note; The doctor conducting the study at the University of Miami was being interviewed and when asked about Wilson's continued support of the program he said; "What comes around, goes around."
Some more stuff;
This has interviews with Kevin and Dr. Cappuccino;
http://www.wgrz.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=62299
http://video.buffalonews.com/player/?id=167&category=Buffalo Bills
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/writers/tim_layden/12/14/everett/
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=4216671&page=1
May your story be as inspirational someday Gabby. Like I did for Kevin, I'm praying for you.