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A Very Nice Place to Stay

‘A Very Nice Place:’ Patient’s Stay at Cook Children’s Inspires Her to Write a Book

“I went to the hospital on a warm summer day with fear in my heart, I felt some dismay. The registrar said, with a smile on her face, ‘Let me show you your room, it’s a very nice place.’”

For most of her 20 years, Shanley Stuteville has been a patient at Cook Children’s.

She came to the medical center at the age of 3 after she began having seizures. Even as an adult, she continues to be seen by the Neurosciences team. After receiving care for so long, Shanley knows better than most how overwhelming a hospital stay can be, especially for younger kids.

“I was in the hospital last summer for my second phase [of testing], and my nurses were mentioning they were really glad I was older because a lot of the younger kids get scared,” Shanley said. “After that, my mom suggested I should write a book to help them.”

After years of testing and needles, Shanley has a wealth of empathy for younger patients. She recalls her initial feelings of fear of the unknown, but they were quickly lost when she realized her hospital was unlike any other.

Shanley began to write in July 2018, while scheduled to undergo testing at Cook Children’s Neurology Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU), where she would be watched 24/7 for four days to see what the source of her seizures was. The book became a family interest when her aunt began to illustrate Shanley’s medical team and created an animated world where leads, IVs and MRI machines weren’t so scary after all.

“Soon an IV was applied to my hand. Their magical spray made it something I could stand,” Shanley wrote. “It took away the pain and for that I was glad. It did not hurt, not even a tad.”

Shanley donated 50 copies of her children’s book to the Epilepsy Unit, but despite her appointments and hospital stays she’s found other ways to give back to her medical team. As a student leader at her university, Shanley completes a lot of service hours, but her service project last year was a hospital-sized treat.

As a “thank you” to her medical team, Shanley baked over 900 cookies for the Dodson Specialty Clinic staff. It took her a period of several school semesters to complete, but she delivered homemade cookies to each floor.

Although she spends an ample amount of time at Cook Children’s trying to figure out why she has seizures, it’s not uncommon for patients with epilepsy to have periods of time without seizures. Shanley would occasionally go 100 days without seizures, and even celebrated with a cake with her nearly lifelong doctor, Howard Kelfer, M.D., a Cook Children’s neurologist. However a life without seizures was never permanent.

“She’d go long periods of time without having a seizure and then one would come back around so it was really discouraging for them because they thought she was going to be over it,” Dr. Kelfer said. “It eventually became very clear that her seizures weren’t responding just to medications. It was always, ‘well she went this long without a seizure, maybe she’ll go longer this next time.”

Shanley was eventually determined as a surgical candidate after her time in the EMU last summer. Her surgery in May 2019 removed a portion of the front lobe in her brain. While she has not had a seizure since, it will take a year of no seizure activity before it can be deemed a success.

Shanley is now able to sleep through the night, a small comfort she didn’t have before her surgery. Her surgeons were also careful in the placement of her scar, which will be hidden by her hair when it begins to grow back.

“I have to say that I wouldn’t mind if it did [show],” Shanley said. “It will always be a reminder of the wonderful men and women at Cook, as well as hopefully provide an example to other children that they can walk through this and recover too.”

Shanley remains an advocate for younger patients, and is recovering quickly after her brain surgery. Her passion for patients inside the medical center has shaped her life for the last 17 years, and she is hopeful to make it a lifelong expression of gratitude.

“Shanley and her family come to all the family support groups and they’re willing to volunteer to talk to other families,” Dr. Kelfer said. “Shanley is extremely motivated to not allow her seizures define who she is.”

Following her surgery last month, Shanley will return to school this fall where she is studying to become a pediatric occupational therapist.

“A Very Nice Place” is currently available on Amazon. “The hospital can be a Very Nice Place! This Children’s Book follows some common tests for epilepsy. Going to the hospital can be intimidating. A Very Nice Place hopes to calm fears and lesson concerns about what will happen while the child is there.