The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio ER doctor finds ‘hope and joy in suffering’ after paralyzing ski accident

- Stephanie Warsmith

When Dr. Jason Kolb returned from Colorado on Good Friday last year, he wheeled instead of walked into his Kent home.

Jason, who was an emergency medicine doctor at Summa Akron City Hospital, had been paralyzed from the waist down in a skiing accident.

Jason immediatel­y accepted after his accident that he would never walk again, relying on his faith to guide him through this trying time.

A year later, Jason's Christian foundation remains strong. He feels that he has, in a sense, been resurrecte­d.

“Half of me did die,” he said, as he sat with his dog, Daisy, on his lap. “The second half – we'll see what God does with it.”

Jason, 50, was injured in a skiing accident on Copper Mountain in Colorado on Jan. 29, 2023. He was on a trip with a group of men who met through The Chapel in Akron.

Jason, a father of four, spent two months at Craig Hospital outside of Denver, where he learned to master the tasks of everyday life in a wheelchair.

While Jason was at Craig, numerous updates were made to his home, including a hydraulic lift in the garage, a carpet-free first floor and a path from the garage to the back patio.

Jason and his wife, Amy, appreciate the support that made these renovation­s possible, with hundreds of people donating nearly $170,000. This was just enough to cover the house updates and to buy a Toyota Sienna van that operates with hand controls.

People also provided meals for the family for months and helped with other tasks, including organizing closets, building shelves and pulling weeds.

“I was so grateful,” said Amy, 48, who has been by Jason's side most of the time since his accident. “It was so much.”

In the months since his return home, Jason has been continuing to heal while figuring out what he now plans to do with his life, especially because he can no longer be an ER doctor. Those plans are still taking shape but will include cowriting a book, continuing to be involved with his church, and possibly teaching part-time.

Many people admire Jason's stalwart faith in the face of such adversity, including Knute Larson, the retired longtime pastor of The Chapel in Akron. Larson was among the church leaders who started the annual ski trip nearly 30 years ago, with the goals of Bible study and camaraderi­e.

Larson, who still skis at 83 and was on the trip with Jason, called what happened “one of the most devastatin­g events I've been through.” He said Jason can serve as an example of how to cope with suffering.

Jason recalls ski accident

Jason's accident happened on the third day of his ski trip. Most people planned to leave the next day.

Jason, who had skied since fifth grade, put on his winter gear and boots and walked about 20 yards on a trail, then snapped on his skis. He had checked his watch and knew his fastest speed of the trip was 53 mph.

“I'm going to beat it,” he thought. At the top of Treble Clef, a black diamond mountain he'd skied before, Jason and his friend Jon Bucciarell­i took a quick selfie around noon.

As Jason skied down the mountain, he made a right turn instead of a left. When he crested the top of a small hill, he realized a tubing area was in front of him. He was concerned he might hit the people waiting there.

“I thought, ‘I have one chance to stop,' and planted my skis,” he recalled. “The last thing I remember, my feet stopped, and I screamed.”

Jason's spinal surgeon later told him he hit the ground and fell forward, which was what severely injured his spine.

The last recorded speed on Jason's watch was 53.1 mph.

Jason was knocked unconsciou­s. When he awoke, Bucciarell­i asked if Jason could feel his legs, which were at an awkward angle.

“I'm a T-10 paralytic but God's grace will be sufficient,” Jason told his friend, referring to the vertebrae located at the belly button.

Jason undergoes surgery

The ski patrol brought Jason down the mountain to a waiting ambulance.

Bad weather made a helicopter ride impossible.

Jason was taken first to a nearby hospital and then to a larger hospital in Denver.

Bucciarell­i and Dr. Michael Smith, another friend who is a retired spinal surgeon, went with him on this hospital trek. They also called Amy, who had just flown to Cleveland from Florida to return home. They told her Jason had been in an accident and couldn't feel his legs.

Amy boarded another plane for Denver, never leaving the airport.

Jason learned from his spinal surgeon that his self-assessment was correct. He had a burst fracture in his T-10 vertebrae with fragments going into his spinal cord. It was damaged “completely,” which meant he was paralyzed below the waist.

Jason had also broken 14 ribs, his sternum and his collarbone. He had surgery to realign his spine.

Daniel, Jason's oldest son who is 20, visited his father when he was still in the ICU. He said seeing him in a hospital bed with IVS in his arms was a shock.

“He was very kind, asking how I was doing,” Daniel recalled. “It was a lot. I tried to be strong for him..”

Jason relearns basic skills

Jason knew he had a long recovery road ahead and decided Craig Rehabilita­tion Hospital, a renowned rehabilita­tion facility that was near the Denver hospital where he was staying, was the best place for him to do this.

The recovery wasn't easy. Jason cried every day for the first month.

Jason said his low point was when he lost control of his bowels at the end of a physical therapy session. He said he returned to his room, wept and asked God, “It's not enough that I can't walk?” Jason had colostomy surgery. Jason, though, said most of his time at Craig was fun and challengin­g. He had to learn how to lift himself from the bed to his wheelchair, care for his skin to avoid bed sores, get in and out of a car and airplane seat, and maneuver his wheelchair up and down steps. “It was like learning to walk again,” Jason said.

Jason's kids – Daniel; Luke, 18; Noah, 16; and Grace, 13 – all visited him at the rehab facility.

Jason decides what’s next in life

When Jason returned home, he had to decide what to do next.

He had been an emergency room physician for nearly 20 years, first at Alliance Community Hospital and then at Summa Akron City Hospital, where he worked for U.S. Acute Care Solutions, the physician group that provides ER doctors for Summa.

He was fortunate to have disability insurance and for his mortgage and medical school bills to be completely paid off, which meant he had less expenses than he would have earlier in his life.

Jason began working part-time for U.S. Acute Care, doing grant writing and administra­tive work. He also teaches residents once a month.

Jason had been thinking of transition­ing into drug rehabilita­tion. He considered a couple positions in this field but decided he didn't yet have the stamina to work full-time or to drive two hours a day.

Jason recently interviewe­d for a parttime teaching position at Northeast Ohio Medical University (NEOMED) that would involve teaching medical students, as well as providing drug rehabilita­tion services. He expects to hear if he got the job by early April, with it slated to start in July.

Jason shares his story

Jason and Amy have spoken about his accident at several area churches and schools.

Jason said his main messages are: “There's hope and joy in suffering,” and “You're not alone.”

After they spoke at the Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy, Amy said a young girl told her how much what they said meant to her. The girl suffers from depression.

Jason is also collaborat­ing on a book with Tricia Heyer, an author he and Amy know through The Chapel.

Heyer is originally from Akron but has lived in Colorado since 2003. She has written 15 books, including a New York Times bestseller.

Heyer said she was intrigued by how Jason's relationsh­ips and faith were strong before and only deepened after his accident.

“How do you get to a place where you have such trust and such faith that, when you have a life-altering injury, it changes so many things, but not who you are as a person?” asked Heyer.

Heyer traveled to Kent in July, where she spent 14 hours talking to Jason, Amy, their children, and other family members and friends.

Heyer, who is also a teacher, asked Jason to make a list of the things he misses or will miss.

The list included walking the dog, cycling, waterskiin­g, snow skiing, walking nine holes of golf, living pain free, being on no medication, walking his daughter down the aisle, and flipping his leg over Amy's leg in bed.

Heyer said she has completed a draft of the book and will continue collaborat­ing with Jason until it's finished.

Jason hopes the book, “Coming Down the Mountain,” will be done by early fall. He plans to self-publish it on Amazon.

Jason said he has no idea if the book will do well or if only his mother and a few friends will buy it.

“If God wants it to be successful, fine,” he said. “I hope it changes people's lives.”

 ?? LISA SCALFARO/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL ?? Jason Kolb looks at a charcoal drawing called “Sacred Ground” that hangs in his Kent home, while Daisy, the family’s dog, sits on his lap.
LISA SCALFARO/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL Jason Kolb looks at a charcoal drawing called “Sacred Ground” that hangs in his Kent home, while Daisy, the family’s dog, sits on his lap.

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