Giffords to move to rehab clinic

Gabrielle Giffords, in a handout photoMs Giffords has made steady progress following several rounds of surgery

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords is to be moved on Friday to a rehabilitation centre, her family has said.

Ms Giffords, shot over the left eye in a mass shooting in Arizona last week, continues to recover in hospital.

Barring further medical complications, she will be moved to Memorial Hermann Rehabilitation Hospital in Houston, where her husband works for Nasa.

Jared Loughner, 22, has been jailed pending trial for the attack in Tucson, in which six were killed and 13 hurt.

“I am extremely hopeful at the signs of recovery that my wife has made since the shooting,” her husband Mark Kelly, a space shuttle astronaut, said in a statement released by Ms Giffords’s congressional office.

He said doctors at University Medical Center in Tucson, Arizona, where his wife has undergone a series of operations, had stabilised her to the point she could move into the rehabilitation phase of recovery.

He and Ms Giffords’s parents had chosen the rehabilitation clinic because of its “national reputation for treating serious penetrating brain injuries” and its relative closeness to Tucson, Mr Kelly said.

Ms Giffords’s mother, meanwhile, has told friends the Democratic congresswoman has made remarkable progress since the 8 January attack at a constituency event outside a store in Tucson.

Gloria Giffords told friends in an e-mail that her daughter had scrolled through photographs on her husband’s iPhone and had begun to look at “get well” cards and pages from a large-print book while in her hospital room, the New York Times reported.

“It’s good news for all of us and for all the people who have been praying for wisdom and strength for the surgeons and others who have been helping her,” Stephanie Aaron, Ms Giffords’s rabbi at Congregation Chaverim in Tucson, told the Associated Press news agency.

“It’s nothing short of a miracle, but it’s also Gabby’s will to fight. It’s her strength of spirit.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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