JUST IN: ”I’ll Not Be Held Responsible For This Great Lost” Alabama Head Coach Angrily…

”I’ll Not Be Held Responsible For This Great Lost” Alabama Head Coach Angrily…

Mobile, Alabama – Kimberly Smith remembers that on October 8th of last year, when she went home to Tung Avenue in Theodore, the road was blocked by numerous fire vehicles and emergency personnel.

Smith recalled, “I asked the police officer if they had gotten out when I realized it was my house.”

“They” refers to Smith’s parents. At the time of the fire, both were confined to wheelchairs and at home. When he heard oxygen tanks exploding while visiting his relatives across the street, a retired fire chief responded to save them.

“He’s our family’s angel; he helped my mom leave the house and picked her up.” Because they would not have lived if he hadn’t been there, Smith claimed.

Her father, a Parkinson’s disease veteran, spent a week in the hospital after suffering minor burns. The left and right sides of Kay Vanek’s body sustained second and third degree burns. She is sixty-six years old. She was hit by burning attic insulation when her power wheelchair broke.

She spent 21 days in the burn unit of the United States and is scheduled to be discharged from a rehabilitation center on Tuesday. Her left arm is finally healing after numerous surgeries and three skin grafts.

She can’t use her left side and is still in considerable pain. Smith clarified, “She has to learn how to use her right arm because she is left-handed and that arm is burned.

If all of this wasn’t enough, Kay is currently receiving dialysis due to her high dosage of medication. She was also released early because, as a result of a back surgery hospital stay earlier in the year, her insurance did not cover her entire course of therapy for her fire recovery. She is going to remain at home till insurance resumes.

Now, the family is requesting assistance to cover the cost of caregivers and transportation to and from dialysis.

“Having someone assist with her care while I’m at work and to help us keep her going to dialysis would be a blessing.” But I know that God exists and that she was saved and brought out because he has a purpose for her life,” Smith remarked.

Kay’s mother, who was ninety-three, passed away from cancer during her first stay at University Hospital, and she was not able to attend her funeral.

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