Waterloo Region Record

Brain injury victim ‘talks’ for first time

- Keith Doucette The Canadian Press

HALIFAX — In what her mother calls a “Christmas miracle,” a Nova Scotia woman who suffered a catastroph­ic brain injury in a 1996 car accident communicat­ed one-onone with her mother for the first time in 21 years.

Louise Misner said her 37-year-old daughter Joellen Huntley used eye-motion cameras and software on an iPad to respond to a comment from Misner about her clothes.

Huntley has been severely disabled since she was 15, unable to walk or talk and fed through a tube.

She has always responded to family members’ presence by making sounds, but was unable to communicat­e any thoughts.

The breakthrou­gh occurred during a Christmas Day visit at the Kings Regional Rehabilita­tion Centre in Waterville, N.S.

“I said, ‘Joellen, I like your new Christmas outfit you got on,’” Misner said in a telephone interview on Friday.

Misner said her daughter then used the technology to find an icon for a shortsleev­ed shirt.

“And then she said no, and went to a long-sleeved shirt because she was trying to tell me what she had on.”

Misner said her reaction was immediate to what had been a long-hoped-for personal communicat­ion.

“Christmas miracle,” she said. “It was God’s way of telling me that she’s finally achieved what she needed to since the accident.”

Huntley was thrown from a car that had swerved to avoid a dog that was running loose along a road in Centrevill­e, N.S., on April 18, 1996.

The accident claimed the life of her boyfriend and a young girl who was the sister of the driver.

Huntley’s family eventually won a $1million insurance settlement as a result of the crash, but by 2014 they found themselves embroiled in a court battle with the province’s Community Services Department, which sought to claw back the money for past and future care costs.

An undisclose­d out-of-court settlement was reached in April 2015, after Joellen’s family argued they needed the money for care that included physiother­apy and special equipment that would add to her quality of life.

Misner said the settlement money helped the family purchase the computer equipment she is now using with the help of a speech pathologis­t.

“We had to go through two or three different screens until we found the right one for her and it’s called Eyegaze.

“Her eyes focus on the icons to answer questions.”

Misner said one of Joellen’s nurses told them she is “doing really well with it.”

“I knew she just needed time for technology to catch up with her,” Misner said. “When God gives you a child, they are the most precious thing and you never give up on them and you always fight for them.”

The family has invited journalist­s to the rehab centre on Tuesday to “meet Joellen.”

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