Sitting beside Tiffany's bed in the intensive care unit, Bonnie Armstrong knew her niece was dying. At that moment, she made a vow to the tiny infant. She promised that if she were to fight to live, Bonnie would make something good come out of all this. "This" was the problem that had put Tiffany in that bed: shaken baby syndrome.
Within an hour, Tiffany's vital signs began to improve. Eventually, she was able to leave the hospital. Bonnie kept her promise and then some. She adopted Tiffany, founded the Shaken Baby Alliance and began to work not only to help victims of shaking, but also to punish those who hurt the children.
Learning disorders are common, as is blindness, hearing loss, paralysis and seizure disorders. |
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Now, nine years later, Tiffany is a happy, healthy third-grader. She needs accommodations in math and reading, but does well in other subjects. Bonnie still heads the shaken baby alliance, educating the law enforcement community and acting as an advocate for shaken babies and counseling shakers who are in the process of rehabilitation. She even makes recommendations to the courts about an abuser's prospects for rehabilitation.
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