The Oklahoman

Teen wakes from coma to find world in pandemic

Brit lost consciousn­ess weeks before the UK imposed lockdown

- Kaanita Iyer

A British teen who slipped into coma before COVID-19 became a pandemic is now showing signs of improvemen­t, regaining consciousn­ess in a world much different from the one he knew.

Joseph Flavill, 19, fell into a coma March 1, three weeks before the United Kingdom went into lockdown, The Guardian reported. In recent weeks, he has been regaining consciousn­ess, again being able to follow commands, move his legs and communicat­e through blinking.

His progress has left his family hopeful, even as they struggle to help him make sense of the world around him.

“I just don’t know where to start with it,” Flavill’s aunt, Sally Flavill Smith, told the Guardian. “A year ago if someone had told me what was going to happen over the last year, I don’t think I would have believed it. I’ve got no idea howJoseph’s going to come to understand what we’ve all been through.”

Flavill was hit by a car in the central England county of Staffordshire when the United Kingdom had just 23 reported COVID-19 cases, according to CNN.

As of Thursday, the country has recorded nearly 3.9 million cases, according to Johns Hopkins University. The teen contracted the virus twice while in a coma, the Guardian reported.

Because of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, most of Flavill’s family have been able to check up on him only via video calls in the past 10 months, during which they have tried to briefly explain why they can’t be with him in person, Flavill Smith told the Guardian. Hismother has been allowed to visit him, but only at a distance and dressed in protective gear, according to CNN. She is waiting until it’s safe to touch him.

“That’s a big thing for his mum to emotionall­y manage, watching him through a screen,” Kate Yarbo, another aunt of Flavill, told CNN. “You want to hold his hand. You want to be there all the time.”

After a tough recovery journey, which included seizures, Flavill has improved in the past fewweeks, Yarbo told CNN.

“We’ve still got a long journey ahead, but the steps he’s made in the last three weeks have been absolutely incredible,” Flavill Smith told the Guardian.

The family has set up a website, “Joseph’s Journey,” to raise money for Flavill’s recovery and to raise awareness of traumatic brain injuries.

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