COURAGEOUS GIRL.
TWENTY-ONE OPERATIONS. AMPUTATION OF LEG. [from oi;r own correspondent.] SYDNEY. April 14. To most people (lie loss of a lop would mean tho loss of all hope of enjoying life, but to Rose Tramby, a country girl now in Sydney, it means a new lease of life—a. life free from pain and worry, that will hold some enjoyment after all. To the well-meaning sympathy of ; who would condole with her because sho | has had a limb amputated, she replies, j "What's the use of worrying? It only makes other people miserable as wall ar» yourself." 1 his from a 22-year-old girl who has not had a. dance or played a game for six years and has spent over three years in bed. With tho amputation of her log a week ago she underwent her 21st operation since 1926. Six years ago Miss Tratnbv was walking through the garden of her home when sho struck her shin on a lap. She took little notice of the accident until a swelling formed on her leg. Doctors diagnosed the trouble as an abscess and within ;i week sho submitted to operation number one—the log was opened up and the abscess drained. When this had been done seven times within a month it was recognised that something serious was wrong and the girl came to Sydney for treatment. A specialist diagnosed the girl's trouble as osteomylitis—a disease affecting the bone, which rots away—and, since then. Rose's life has been just one operation after another. There followed 11 operations in Sydney Hospital and two in the Royal Prince Alfred for draining, bono scraping and the removal of decayed pieces of bone. On one occasion bono removals had left a dent, as it were, in her leg, so the surgeons took spare flesh from one part of the limb and grafted it in to fill up the hollow. From list, in weight Miss Tramby dropped to 7st. and, after a spell in the country for her to build up, returned to Sydney and had the leg amputated above tho knee. Now sho is rapidly gaining weight, is free from pain and worry and her one concern is for the next few months to pass so that she can wear an artificial limb. "I'll lie able to danco, then," the girl says. "Why, there's a man up home who has a false log and he never misses a dance. He and i will be good mates. And maybo I'll lie able to play somo games, too, just like other girls. * .Meanwhile I can stick to my hobbies —sewing shirts on to buttons and playing music —on tho gramophone."
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19320423.2.164
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21165, 23 April 1932, Page 15
Word Count
443COURAGEOUS GIRL. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21165, 23 April 1932, Page 15
Using This Item
NZME is the copyright owner for the New Zealand Herald. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons New Zealand BY-NC-SA licence . This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of NZME. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.
Acknowledgements
This newspaper was digitised in partnership with Auckland Libraries and NZME.