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Benefit for Lorelei Brink to be held Saturday

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Lorelei Brink (Photo by BKreativ Films)

An Iowa girl is on the path to recovery after facing incredible health challenges during her first months of life.

This February, Lorelei Brink went into cardiac arrest from influenza A on her way to the emergency room in La Crosse. She was two-months-old at the time. Her family said her heart and lungs made miraculous recoveries and her kidneys continue to heal, but Lorelei sustained a severe, widespread brain injury.

Doctors predicted she will be diagnosed with spastic quadriplegic cerebral palsy. They told her parents, JayR and Jerrica Brink of Waterville, she will not be able to walk, talk, see, or eat and will be minimally responsive.

Lorelei continues to make progress to defeat that prognosis each day. Family members say she is rolling over, making sounds and smiling, and her vision is showing improvement.

A benefit will be held Saturday at the Allamakee County Fairgrounds Pavilion to help raise funds for her physical and occupational therapy.

“This is a long road to recovery, so we really need to pull together and help them out a lot, relative Justin Shepard said. “We’re looking for all of the support we can get. This is something very close to not only me but also a lot of people in town here. Being part of my family, we hope to get a great turnout.”

The event begins with a 1:00 p.m. meal followed by a bake sale and silent auction until 3:30 p.m. and a live auction at 4:00 p.m. More information can be found online.

Kaitlyn Riley’s passion for communications started on her family’s dairy farm in Gays Mills, Wis. Wanting to share agriculture’s story, she studied strategic communications and broadcast journalism at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In college, she held officer positions with the Association of Women in Agriculture and Badger Dairy Club while volunteering as a news reporter for the college radio station. She also founded the university’s first agricultural radio talk show, AgChat. In her professional career, Kaitlyn has worked in radio, print and television news doing everything from covering local events to interviewing presidential candidates, and putting back on her barn boots to chat with farmers in the field. Today, Kaitlyn can be seen covering local stories that matter to you in the La Crosse area.

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