Rotorua Daily Post

‘I spat my teeth into

Battered, but not broken, Kelsey’s staying positive through recovery

- Laurilee Mcmichael

Aaron Dent 027 594 0208

07 348 6199

General Manager BOP

Greg Murphy 07 577 3462

Perhaps mercifully, Kelsey Tarrant doesn’t have any recollecti­on of what hit her. One minute, Kelsey, 20, was heading from Taupo¯ along Poihipi Rd to her job as a fencer. She only recalls snatches of what happened after that.

The car windshield was draped across her. A fireman took the car door off and said: “I don’t know how you did it but you shouldn’t be alive.” She spat her loose teeth out into somebody’s hand and asked him to give them to her parents. She was in a vehicle — she realises now it must have been the Greenlea rescue helicopter — being taken somewhere. That is all.

The facts are this: at 6.50am on March 12 this year, Kelsey was driving her white 2004 Nissan Pulsar from Taupo¯ to Oruanui to start work. She was wearing a singlet, shorts and work boots. She had a passenger in the front seat. At the bottom of the winding hill on Poihipi Rd, a car heading towards Taupo¯ crossed the centre line and collided with Kelsey’s head-on. Her side of the car took the brunt of the impact. The airbags went off, adding burns and friction grazes to Kelsey’s list of impact injuries.

Jaw fractured in three places. Concussion. Broken teeth and crowns. Whiplash. Broken nose and sinuses. Fractured sternum and three broken ribs. Dislocated and fractured right shoulder. Left arm broken in two places. Lower spine fractures. Broken tail bone. Three breaks in her pelvis. Dislocated right knee and a compound fracture in the other. Crushed right ankle. Lacerated spleen, bruised lungs, kidneys, bladder and other internal injuries.

Really, it’s a miracle and a tribute to Taupo¯ emergency services and the skill of medical staff that she survived. Even more so when Kelsey walks into the room under her own steam, smiling cheerfully and radiating positivity.

It took nearly an hour to extract Kelsey from the wreckage of her car, a careful process aimed at not making her life-threatenin­g injuries worse. She was then helicopter­ed, at status one (critical), to Waikato Hospital.

While Kelsey was being prepared for emergency surgery, her parents Jeni and Blue were fretting about her failure to show up for work. Jeni rang Kelsey’s phone, checked her social media and tried contacting her friends. Eventually, Blue heard by chance that there had been an accident involving a white car on

Poihipi Rd. They were about to head out there to see what they could find out when a police car came up the drive. Jeni felt sick. Sergeant Shane Mcnally stepped out and simply said: “They’re alive”.

The Tarrants hurriedly threw some belongings into a bag and set off to Hamilton, with Kelsey’s brother Fergus arriving there ahead of them from his home in Morrinsvil­le. By then Kelsey was already in theatre and did not emerge until after 9pm where surgeons had been busy setting her broken arm and washing out all the glass and plastic from numerous puncture wounds on her bare arms and legs caused by the broken windscreen. Over the next two weeks, she underwent six more operations.

Medical staff attributed her survival to being young and fit but Kelsey did everything she could after the crash to give herself the best possible chance of recovery. For her, that included the power of positivity.

“They kept saying mindset is a big part of healing and, if you have a negative mindset, it apparently goes slower because your endorphins promote healing,” Kelsey explained. “I tried to stay positive because I didn’t see much point in being anything else.”

Just after the Covid-19 alert level 4 lockdown began, Kelsey was transferre­d to Taupo¯ Hospital, where she was unable to have visitors. Her cellphone had been destroyed in the crash but her parents bought her a tablet and she spent her time messaging friends or reading online. She also took a lot of pleasure from seeing people walking their dogs past the hospital every day, particular­ly the regulars — “it made me happy”.

Part of staying happy included not keeping up with news of the lockdown. Kelsey says she just wanted to focus on healing and all the positive things she could and, as she continued to improve, she became more mobile inside her hospital bubble.

“I was able to transfer myself into my wheelchair and go off around the halls and talk to the nurses and go to the lounges. It was a fitness kind of thing because I was so used to being fit and active. I just filled my time in doing things, talking to people and stuff.”

She was active on Facebook and Instagram, posting about her recovery and was buoyed by the many supportive and encouragin­g comments she received.

“It was amazing and even people who had barely talked to me over the years were messaging me and saying ‘was I okay’ and saying if I needed anyone to talk to, they were there. So many people came out of the woodwork wanting to help and support and be there — anything I needed. Having people there to be able to talk to was really good.”

Kelsey got her casts off on April

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? The corner on Poihipi Rd, on Taupo¯ ’s outskirts, where a car coming the other way crossed the centre line and crashed into Kelsey’s headon.
Photo / Supplied The corner on Poihipi Rd, on Taupo¯ ’s outskirts, where a car coming the other way crossed the centre line and crashed into Kelsey’s headon.
 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Kelsey, pictured here on her second day in Waikato Hospital’s highdepend­ency unit, manages a smile.
Photo / Supplied Kelsey, pictured here on her second day in Waikato Hospital’s highdepend­ency unit, manages a smile.

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