<p><span>SAVANNAH, Ga.</span> (AP) — A Georgia lady diagnosed with a rare, flesh-eating illness will shortly leave a sanatorium where doctors gave her small possibility of flourishing when she was certified scarcely dual months ago, her father pronounced Tuesday.</p>
<p>Doctors devise to liberate 24-year-old <span>Aimee Copeland</span> on Monday. Instead of going home, she’ll pierce to an quadriplegic reconstruction sanatorium and spend a subsequent several weeks training to pierce herself with a assist of a wheelchair after carrying her left leg, right feet and both hands amputated.</p>
<p>“She’s genuine vehement about leaving,” Copeland’s father, <span>Andy Copeland</span>, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. “She only wants a change of venue.”</p>
<p>Copeland was diagnosed with a singular infection, called necrotizing fasciitis. It came after she suffered a low cut May 1 by descending from a damaged zip-...
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