Doctors say shot Pakistani girl improving
|
In
this undated photo provided by the University Hospitals Birmingham NHS
Foundation Trust on Friday, Oct. 19, 2012, 15-year old Pakistani
shooting victim Malala Yousufzai recovers in Queen Elizabeth Hospital in
Birmingham, England, after being shot in the head by the Taliban in
Pakistan for advocating education for girls. Malala was shot and
critically wounded on Oct. 9 as she headed home from school in the
northwest Swat Valley, Pakistan, and was evacuated to Birmingham for
ongoing treatment, where she is reported to be improving. |
LONDON (AP)
-- The British hospital treating a 15-year-old Pakistani girl shot in
the head by the Taliban raised hopes for her recovery Friday when
doctors said she was able to stand with some help and to write.
Malala
Yousufzai appeared with her eyes open and alert as she lay in a
hospital bed, in the first photographs released by the Queen Elizabeth
Hospital in Birmingham since she arrived from Pakistan on Monday.
It
was a series of positive developments since the shooting, which was a
brazen bid by the Taliban to silence the girl, who has been an outspoken
advocate for girls' right to education.
Still, doctors said she shows signs of infection and faces a long, difficult recovery with uncertain prospects.
"She
is not out of the woods yet," hospital medical director Dr. Dave Rosser
said. "Having said that, she's doing very well. In fact, she was
standing with some help for the first time this morning when I went in
to see her."
He said Malala had agreed to the
release of medical information and photos, and wants to thank people
throughout the world for their interest and support in the difficult
days since she was gunned down in Pakistan.
He said her bullet wound has become infected.
A
large bruise beneath her left eye could be seen in the photo released
Friday, showing Malala in her hospital bed with a toy bear. The upbeat
report galvanized Malala's many backers, who had feared the worst.
Bakhtawar Bhutto Zardari, daughter of the late Pakistani leader Benazir Bhutto, described Malala's progress as wondrous.
"Miracles of today: Malala able to stand," she tweeted.
Canadian
writer and journalist Irshad Manji celebrated the girl's progress on
Twitter: "So listen up world; Miracle Malala has more 2 say."
Brain injury experts stressed, however, that she is at the start of what will be a long process.
Dr.
Jaime Levine, medical director of brain injury rehabilitation at the
Rusk Rehabilitation unit at NYU Langone Medical Center in Manhattan,
said Malala's ability to stand with assistance and move her arms was a
"wonderful sign," but the doctor said it was too soon to say whether she
would make a complete recovery.
"For some,
recovery from a brain injury is a lifelong process," Levine said. "Some
people are left with limitations for the rest of their lives. We speak
about recovery in terms of goals and function. For a 15-year-old girl
attending school with the promise of her whole life in front of her,
goals for her are to finish school and to have a job one day and to have
a family. ... But we're not talking about those goals yet. We're
talking about short-term goals."
Malala has come to be a symbol for a girl's right to education.
At
the age of 11, she began writing a blog under a pseudonym for the BBC
about life under the Taliban in the Swat Valley. After the military
ousted the militants in 2009, she began publicly speaking out about the
need for girls' education. She appeared frequently in the media and was
given one of the country's highest civilian honors for her bravery.
Malala
was shot and critically wounded on Oct. 9 as she headed home from
school in the northwest Swat Valley. The Taliban said they targeted
Malala, a fierce advocate for girls' education, because she promoted
"Western thinking" and was critical of the militant group.
The Taliban attack was widely condemned.
U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the shooting as a "heinous and
cowardly act," and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said
the "attack reminds us of the challenges that girls face, whether it is
poverty or marginalization or even violence just for speaking out for
their basic rights."
Malala was flown from
Pakistan to Birmingham on Monday for advanced medical treatment and for
security protection. She was in a medically induced coma when she
arrived, and regained consciousness on Tuesday, the hospital said.
The
medical briefing Friday offered the first real indication of her
progress. Earlier briefings were quite limited out of respect for the
girl's privacy.
She is in Britain alone. Hospital officials have been in touch with her family in Pakistan.
Rosser
said the girl "is communicating very freely, she is writing" but not
speaking because she has a tracheotomy tube in her throat.
"We
have no reason to believe that she would not be able to talk once this
tube is out, which it may be in the next few days," Rosser said.
Scans
have revealed some physical damage to her brain, but "at this stage
we're not seeing any deficit in terms of function," Rosser said.
"She seems able to understand. She's got motor control, she's able to write.
"Whether there's any subtle intellectual or memory deficits down the line is too early to say," he added.
"It is possible she will make a smooth recovery, but it is impossible to tell I'm afraid."
Malala
needs time to recover her strength before surgery to reconstruct her
skull, either with her own bone or a titanium plate, the hospital said
in a briefing note. That could be weeks or months in the future.
The
bullet, which was removed by surgeons in Pakistan, hit Malala's left
brow. It traveled beneath the skin and into the neck, damaging soft
tissue at the base of the jaw and base of the neck, the note said.
"There is every sign that she understands why she's here," Rosser said.
"It's
a very difficult position for her, clearly, because she has gone from
being on a school bus and the next thing she will be consciously aware
of is being in a strange hospital in a different country."
Officials
in the Swat Valley originally said Malala was 14 years old, but
officials at her school confirmed that her birthday was July 12, 1997,
making her 15, as the U.S. public broadcaster NPR reported earlier.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.