Osgood family blessed
with trip
Jennifer Rogers - Intern Writer
Kalena Holland, 4, along with her parents, John
and Kathy Holland, and her cousins Tony and Marie Bien, have
just returned to their Osgood home after traveling to Orlando,
Florida on a Wish Upon a Star trip.
Kalena has battled many health issues since she
was six weeks old. She has been on too many medications to
count, she has had numerous surgeries, and doctors still have
not come up with a clear diagnosis.
Kalena traveled to the Give Kids the World Resort
in Orlando, Florida with her mother, father, and two cousins
from May 16-21. Her dad said, "This trip was truly a blessing." The
family flew down to Florida, and when they arrived in the airport
they were greeted with a sign that welcomed Kalena's family.
The people who were there to meet them even took care of claiming
their luggage.
The Hollands stayed in a two-bedroom condo in
the Give Kids the World Village. The condo was completely furnished
with sheets, towels, soap, and even food. The 51-acre village
has constant entertainment, swimming pools, plenty of food,
horseback riding, and an amusement park.
During their trip they went to Walt Disney World,
Universal Studios, and Sea World. Kalena was able to meet every
character one on one, get their autograph, and have her picture
taken with them. She was excited to see all the characters,
but her very favorite was Barney, and she gave him a big hug. "She
loves Barney," her dad commented. In her house, Kalena
has a Barney lamp on top of the television she watches, and
an entire shelving unit full of Barney videotapes. Mr. Holland
said that he makes trips to the Goodwill stores in the area
to find all the Barney items he can for Kalena.
The Hollands traveled with other families from
the tri-state area, and one day the whole group was taken to
the Rainforest Café to eat, where once again, no one
paid a cent. On another occasion, Jan Kemp, the Wish Upon a
Star Director, took everyone to the beach, and even provided
drinks and snacks in a cooler, and floats for all the kids.
Mr. Holland first found out about the Wish Upon
a Star program on the Internet. He sent an email to the address
listed on the site to request more information, and in less
than two weeks he received information about the program. Kalena's
doctors filled out some papers, and they were approved to be
part of the program.
Wish Upon A Star is a not-for-profit organization
based in Evansville that grants wishes for children between
three and seventeen who are terminally ill and/or have life
threatening illnesses. To date Wish Upon A Star has granted
189 wishes.
Kalena has battled many health problems throughout
her life. She was born healthy, but when she was six weeks
old she developed a lump on her back, and she began having
fevers around 103 degrees. Doctors call this condition periodic
fever syndrome, and the fevers would last for days at a time.
She also suffers from inflammation within her muscle tissues
(JRA). During her life so far she has had six spinal taps and
even bone marrow scopes. Kalena is also severely anemic, which
makes it almost impossible for doctors to find a vein to take
blood from, or give an IV through.
Kalena and her family have been to the National
Institute of Health in Washington, D.C. five times for extensive
research on her health. The NIH is the head research center
for the entire country. When she goes there the same tests
are run every time to detect any changes in her health. In
her first visit to the NIH they found that she didn't have
her full capacity for hearing. When Kalena was one year old
she went deaf.
Kalena and her family learned sign language.
Her father said that she picked it up very quickly, and even
remembered some of the signs when her parents would forget.
Kalena taught her cousins many of the signs so they could communicate
with each other. Mr. Holland had heard about cochlear implants
as a possible solution to Kalena's deafness, so he did more
research on the Internet. He got the process started and had
Kalena checked at the Children's Hospital to determine if she
would be a candidate.
When she was a year and a half old a doctor at
the Children's Hospital performed the surgery. John said the
implants cost $80,000, but he went on to say, "I don't
care if it costs a million dollars, it is worth it for me to
say Kalena and hear her answer." Kalena can now hear as
long as a special magnet is placed on the back of her head.
She can't wear the magnet to sleep, and it can't get wet, so
she still uses sign language in those instances. After the
implants were in, she had therapy to learn how to speak again,
and to use her hearing.
The Hollands took Kalena back to the NIH when
she was two and a half years old to have her eyesight checked
after Children's Hospital noticed some far-sightedness, a change
from only three weeks earlier. After an extensive exam at the
NIH the family was informed that the rods and cones in Kalena's
eyes were deteriorating very quickly. She was already blind
in the dark, she had no peripheral vision, and she only had
10% of her normal vision.
In an attempt to clearly diagnose Kalena's situation,
doctors sent results of all of Kalena's tests and all her previous
medical information out to doctors worldwide over the Internet.
Not one response came back with any information on Kalena's
condition. This proved to her father that "she is one
of a kind."
Doctors have diagnosed her with Usher Syndrome
because of her hearing and eyesight problems, but her conditions
don't exactly match any of the three types of Usher Syndrome.
Not one other person in the entire world has exactly the same
condition that Kalena has. Her dad said, "Everything she
has is uncommon. She doesn't fall under any specific category."
Kalena wasn't born with tonsils or sweat glands.
Without sweat glands, she can't be outside in the heat for
long periods of time because her body can't regulate its temperature.
She also has Immunodeficiency, where her immune system doesn't
function with both B and T cells like most people. Kalena wasn't
born with any B cells, and she has very few T cells. Kalena
also has ectodermal dysplasia, where she gets very painful,
large sores on her body.
From October 2004 until February 2005 Kalena
had constant stomach problems. Her stomach would become inflamed,
and when her parents took her to Children's Hospital, the staff
there said she had "the worst ulcers they had ever seen." Now,
a specialist in the gastro department at Children's Hospital
is controlling her stomach problems. She also sees specialists
in the Rhumatology and Immenology departments on a regular
basis.
Kalena receives IVIG transfusions every three
weeks for four hours at a time, and she has been receiving
these treatments since she was nine months old. Kalena goes
to The Hansen Center in Batesville every eight weeks for Remicade
infusions. At first she would receive her infusions through
needles in her stomach, then they started putting the needles
in her legs. Because she is anemic, doctors can't find veins
to take blood from, or use any IV's, so in February of this
year, Kalena had surgery to put a port in her left shoulder.
She now receives her treatments through the port, and it also
makes it much easier for doctors to take blood, and give her
medicine.
On June 28, Kalena has an appointment at Children's
Hospital to have her eyes examined. They will diagnose any
changes from the last exam she had. Her dad said he has been
noticing her vision getting worse, so they are waiting to see
what the doctors will say this time. Kalena's dad has already
been collecting materials, and working with her on learning
Braille. He said she runs her hand across the letters to get
used to the feel, but they haven't started teaching her the
exact letters yet. She goes to R.O.D. during the school year,
and the teachers there have plans to teach her letters and
words when school starts in the fall.
Kalena's dad said that one reason his daughter
likes Barney so much is that she can see his big purple figure
easily on the television screen, despite her loss of vision.
She looks at him on lamps and other items in the room too.
She knows every Barney video they own by heart.
"We go to Children's (Hospital) non-stop," said
John. In one year, Kalena was in Children's Hospital for overnight
stays at least 30 times. Her dad kept track of the mileage,
and said it was over 19,000 miles just traveling to the hospital
in that year.
Looking back on the week they spent in Florida,
Mr. Holland said, "It was the trip of a lifetime. They
went out of their way for every little detail." He was
so thankful to the Wish Upon a Star program for sending them
on such an amazing trip.
Kalena's family would like to say a special thank
you to the Wish Upon a Star program and Director Jan Kemp,
the Give Kids the World program, and First Steps with Eileen
Eicher and Angie Meyer.

SUBMITTED PHOTO
|
| Kalena Holland, 4, is nestled
between characters Minnie and Mickey Mouse with her
family pictured with her: parents, John and Kathy Holland,
and cousins Tony and Marie Bien. They traveled to Orlando,
FL recently where the little Osgood girl enjoyed meeting
her favorite Disney characters. |