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Dedication
to Brooke Fisher, by Elisa Fisher
My
daughter, Brooke, was the light of my life. For two and a
half years, I knew my life was perfect. My little girl and
I spent afternoons laughing and making up silly songs together.
Brooke had an incredible great sense of humor and loved to
make people laugh. She walked with a dance in her step, and
liked smelling flowers. She loved the swimming pool and splashing
her grandpa. And, she was beautiful. Brooke had big blue eyes,
hair that bounced when she walked, and a toothy smile. She
walked in a room and everyone noticed her. She had such presence.
I
was so proud to be her mother.
I
used to envision the day I would walk her into her first day
of school, snap photos of her and her prom date, and walk
her down the aisle at her wedding. But my dreams, my joy and
my life stopped on June 3, 2000, when my daughter died from
E coli 0157:H7 after being misdiagnosed for five days in three
different hospitals. Many doctors and hospitals failed to
diagnose the E coli, all believing another hospital or doctor
had already performed the simple test. My concerns about the
possibility of tainted meat went ignored although Brooke exhibited
all the classic symptoms. Each hospital released her, claiming
I was over-reacting. My little girl's life ended, and the
music stopped forever.
I
am not proud to live in a community where the lives and safety
of its citizens are governed by strong restaurant associations,
preventing proper safeguards in food handling and preparation.
Brooke died after eating a hamburger from a national fast
food chain that was cooked below proper temperature on a burner
that hadn't been operating properly for five years. Although
health inspectors continued to note the improper heating temperature
of this one burner, they were satisfied that the burner would
not be used. On Memorial Day, when the restaurant was very
busy, a cook decided to speed things along and use this broken
burner just once. That hamburger was given to my daughter.
As
a mother, I strived to protect my daughter from visible dangers,
like looking both ways before crossing the street and staying
away from strangers. But the restaurants that continue to
operate and sicken our children and our families are invisible
dangers. That is, until we stand up and demand that restaurant
safeguards be followed and infractions be reported online
and on restaurant windows for all diners to see.
My
daughter, Brooke, deserved a long life that was full of laughter
and joy. She deserved to be a little girl, a young adolescent,
to date, to go to college, to marry. She deserved to be a
mother and a grandmother to her children, just as beautiful
and wonderful as she was. Hug your children extra hard tonight
and please urge the Health Department in your community to
close down and publicly report any restaurants that fail to
take proper measures to keep their restaurants, their employees,
and the food they serve safe for our children."
Copyright
1999 by Author: Elisa Fisher (Brooke's Mother)
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