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A car crash. A brain injury. 香港六合彩资料 nursing grad Philiz Goh persevered 鈥 and is helping others do the same

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Philiz Goh is still recovering from a 2015 car crash that hampered her ability to walk and read. She's graduating from 香港六合彩资料 with a master's in nursing and is an advocate for accessibility (photo courtesy of Philiz Goh)

A global pandemic has made every student鈥檚 path to graduation this year more difficult, but it was hardly the first obstacle in Philiz Goh鈥檚 long journey to convocation.

In 2015, she was working part-time as an oncology nurse at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and studying for a master鈥檚 of nursing in health systems leadership and administration at the 香港六合彩资料 when a collision on Highway 401 changed her life鈥檚 trajectory.

Driving near the Leslie Street exit on the way to a restaurant for lunch with her family, she felt a jolt as something slammed into the back of her blue Hyundai.

鈥淚 remember the sound of tires and then the crunching of metal and me screaming,鈥 she says.

鈥淎nd then darkness 鈥 black.鈥

Her memory is foggy but she remembers dialing 911 and leaving the crash site in a neck brace, lying flat on a backboard. The collision left her with soft-tissue injuries to her knee, shoulder, neck, back and right hip.

But the most serious problem was the invisible damage to her brain. She was often dizzy, unable to walk and suffered severe headaches, along with other debilitating symptoms. Specialists at Sunnybrook later diagnosed her with 鈥渕ild traumatic brain injury.鈥

鈥淚 had all these plans and all of a sudden everything just kind of collapsed, and it was devastating,鈥 Goh says.

Despite the challenges that lay ahead in her recovery, she was determined to get her life back on track and fulfil her goal of becoming a health-care leader to improve patient care.

One of the hurdles was to regain mobility. In physiotherapy, she completed a range of exercises, wiggling her toes, feeling the swing of her foot, pushing down through her heels to recover spatial awareness and movement. In her eagerness to get better, she overdid the exercises to the point of developing blisters and requiring hand braces.

She saw a long list of specialists: an audiologist (for sound sensitivity), a neuro optometrist and ophthalmologist (for dizziness, balance, double vision and focusing problems), a vestibular therapist (also for dizziness and balance) and a neuropsychiatrist (for injury-related depression, anxiety and PTSD).

Her friend Dorothy Lo was shocked to see the change in Goh soon after the crash. Lo, the head of the division of hematology and oncology at St. Joseph鈥檚 Health Centre and a staff medical oncologist, knew Goh from her residency at Sunnybrook. She found her friend moving with difficulty, wearing noise-cancelling headphones and earmuffs to block out sound and two pairs of sunglasses to filter out light.

Lo tried to lift Goh鈥檚 spirits by encouraging her to take up art again. The pair painted with acrylics on Goh鈥檚 dining table.

Although the crash took a toll on Goh鈥檚 faculties, it did not diminish her willpower or drive, according to Lo.

鈥淥ver the last four years, she was so determined about making a recovery and to share her story and motivate other people,鈥 Lo says. 鈥淪he always had it in her.鈥

About two-and-half years after the collision, Goh鈥檚 therapist asked if she would like to try going back to university to complete her degree. She didn鈥檛 need to think twice.

In the years since the crash, Goh鈥檚 ability to read 鈥 hampered by her injury 鈥 gradually improved through practice and the use of special reading techniques. In the early stages of her recovery, she read in the stop-start manner of a child, she says. 鈥淔or example, if a sentence read: 鈥楾he cat walked across the street,鈥 I would be like: 鈥楾he cat. Walked across. The street.鈥欌

But the academic writing she would be confronted with in her graduate-level nursing program was a different story 鈥 not to mention having to summarize articles in essay form.

That鈥檚 where 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 Irene Sullivan came in.

The neurological team lead at Accessibility Services on the St. George Campus, who has worked in the field for more than 30 years in hospitals and community agencies, met with Goh to address her unique learning needs.

鈥淭he paperwork that comes from a doctor [about an injury] can look identical, but the experience is entirely different for each person based on what they鈥檙e trying to do in their life,鈥 Sullivan says, adding that, while a brain injury can be diagnosed as 鈥渕ild,鈥 its consequences can be serious and life-changing.

Sullivan helped Goh make arrangements with faculty and staff in her program, referred her to outside specialists and introduced her to an adaptive technologist and learning strategist in Accessibility Services. The technologist helped her get connected to an online tool that reads articles aloud while the learning strategist helped Goh break down academic readings and projects into more manageable parts.

鈥淚 took one course at a time. I was very slow,鈥 Goh recalls. 鈥淏ut I was able to complete my master鈥檚. In each course I was able to get 90s, which was fantastic, because I worked really hard.鈥

Amanda Loder, a PhD candidate in physical geography, met Goh in 2018 while they were both junior fellows at Massey College 鈥 three years after the crash. Goh spoke openly about the collision and its impact. 鈥淚t鈥檚 horrifying to think about going from just being an academic or a master鈥檚 student and a nurse and then the next day physically not being able to do that,鈥 Loder says.

鈥淪omething I found inspiring and really interesting: She genuinely wants to educate people on what it鈥檚 like living with a brain injury or having gone through something traumatic.鈥

Goh chaired Massey鈥檚 accessibility committee, gave talks about her experience and about accessibility spaces, and is writing a self-help book about her past with tips for people living with a brain injury.

As Goh鈥檚 graduation day approached, she received a congratulatory email from Sullivan at Accessibility Services. 鈥淚 wish I could shake your hand,鈥 the email said.

 鈥淲e鈥檙e people who helped her along the way, but the work has all been hers,鈥 Sullivan later told 香港六合彩资料 News.

Goh and her family are planning a simple celebration for her convocation day this weekend. Surrounded by close relatives, she plans to watch 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 virtual fall convocation ceremony on her brother鈥檚 big screen TV.

But her journey is not over.

Having gone from wheelchair to walker and now to a cane, Goh is still very much in the process of recovery. She doesn鈥檛 know what the future holds, but, for now at least, she knows she can鈥檛 go back to seeing 150 patients a day as a nurse at Sunnybrook. So, she plans to continue advocating for patients and better accessibility.

鈥淚鈥檓 just determined to do the best I can every day,鈥 she says.

As for others whose path to a life goal has taken an unforeseen turn, Goh says not to lose hope.

鈥淒on鈥檛 let that setback worry you or lose your focus or determination because it鈥檚 just a little blip in your life鈥檚 journey. Focus on your future and the rest of your life 鈥 This little blip is nothing.鈥

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