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thedrifter
02-26-07, 05:33 PM
ABC's Bob Woodruff describes recovery

By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer

Bob Woodruff searched for the word, but it wasn't quite there. It was an internal organ, that he knew. He was describing a soldier's injuries when indecision stopped him. "Intestines," a producer sitting to his left in an ABC News conference room Monday gently reminded him.

The newsman met with reporters for the first time since a roadside bomb in Iraq tore off part of his skull 13 months ago. ABC News is airing a prime-time special, "To Iraq and Back: Bob Woodruff Reports," about Woodruff's recovery and the plight of other brain-injured Iraq veterans at 10 p.m. EST Tuesday. A book he co-wrote with wife Lee also goes on sale Tuesday.

Only in small moments — a dropped word, momentary confusion at a question, a startled look upon hearing a cough — were Woodruff's injuries evident. At one point he used the word "news" in place of "knowledge," but caught and corrected himself before it was noticed.

Small pockmarks from shrapnel on the left side of his face and neck were visible. Doctors said it was a remarkable recovery for someone who had come so close to death.

Upon first emerging from a 36-day coma following the blast, Woodruff couldn't name any of the 50 states and or even recall his twin, 6-year-old daughters — not just their names but their very existence.

"Will I get back 100 percent?" he asked. "Probably unlikely. Maybe if I get somewhere in the 90s, that would be pretty damned good."

He was hurt on his 28th day as "World News Tonight" co-anchor, on Jan. 29, 2006. Woodruff was riding in an Iraqi army tank in Taji, Iraq, his head and upper body exposed through the hatch, when the bomb went off.

"When it actually exploded, I don't remember that," he said. "But I do remember immediately at that moment that I saw my body floating below me and a kind of whiteness."

He briefly lost consciousness, fell back into the tank and woke up to see cameraman Doug Vogt across from him. Woodruff remembered spitting up blood. (Vogt was wounded but survived.)

"I looked up at Doug and I saw his eyes big and afraid and just asking him if we were still alive and that's the last thing I remember," Woodruff said.

He'd been lucky, in one sense. A rock the size of a silver dollar punctured his neck and lodged just next to a vital artery. He was evacuated quickly to medical facilities. But during his coma, no one knew what kind of Woodruff would emerge — if he would at all.

The ABC special illustrates the process of turning the brain back on again. In film of him taken months later, Woodruff stares blankly at pictures of a hammer and scissors, not knowing what to call them. His children laugh with him as he repeatedly fails to pronounce "belt buckle."

A camera catches him crying when he returns to National Naval Medical Center room in Bethesda, Md., where his wife explained that during visits she'd steer their children to the side of the room where his injuries looked less severe.

The most difficult part of his ordeal was knowing what his family experienced. "Every time I see my wife crying, that kills me a little bit," he said Monday.

Woodruff now goes to therapy for his injuries once a week. But reporting and even attending Monday's news conference, where he is forced to think on his feet, are part of his therapy, too, he said.

Two-thirds of Tuesday's special is about how the U.S. government is dealing with veterans returning with brain injuries. Several families contend that the federal government is unprepared, and is also underestimating the number of people returning with brain problems.

"I've been given a chance to tell about something I lived through and seen so many soldiers and Marines live through that I think perhaps that was designed in some way, for the same reason perhaps that I didn't die of this," he said.

Woodruff will be interviewed by ABC's Diane Sawyer on "Good Morning America" Tuesday, and Oprah Winfrey later in the day.

His ability to return as a news anchor is unknown at this point. "It's a possibility," Woodruff said.

For now, he's going to continue reporting the story about injured veterans returning home and then hopes to work on different stories.

Woodruff hedged when asked if he would want to go back and report in Iraq before ABC News President David Westin cut him off.

"I will not send him," Westin said. "It just would not make sense. He's more vulnerable than he was before ... It would be the height of recklessness, from my point of view, to allow Bob Woodruff to go back to Iraq."

Ellie

thedrifter
02-27-07, 06:35 AM
AFN to air special on newsman injured in Iraq

By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Tuesday, February 27, 2007

WASHINGTON — AFN will air an hourlong special this week on ABC News anchor Bob Woodruff’s injury and recovery from a roadside bomb attack in Iraq last year.

The report follows not only Woodruff’s 36-day coma and struggles with brain injuries but also the challenges other troops face with brain trauma resulted from combat wounds.

“This happens to soldiers and Marines every day over there,” he said in a Monday news conference. “Hopefully, knowing what happened to me and (my cameraman) can bring more attention to that.”

On Jan. 29, 2006, Woodruff was traveling with the Army’s Iraqi Assistance Group outside Baghdad when he and cameraman Doug Vogt were wounded in an attack on the patrol.

Both were rushed to a field hospital and then back to the United States, where Woodruff spent six weeks at Bethesda Naval Hospital recovering from his head injuries.

“I am standing here tonight because I got the best military and civilian medical care in the world,” Woodruff says at the opening of the special. “And, because I was very, very lucky.”

Woodruff said he remembers very little of the actual attack, a roadside bomb detonated once he and the patrolling troops exited their vehicles.

He needed months to fully recover his higher cognitive functions, and said he still has large memory gaps from that time. But he also said he is anxious to get back to work, and talked about returning to overseas correspondence work some day. ABC News officials said Woodruff will not be allowed back into Iraq, because his previous head injuries make him more susceptible to serious future injuries.

The special will air on AFN News Wednesday evening at 9 p.m. Baghdad time, and at 10:30 p.m. Kabul time.

Ellie