15-year-old Pakistani shooting victim Malala Yousufzai recovers in Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England, after being shot in the head by the Taleban in Pakistan for advocating education for girls.
Pakistani girl Malala able to stand But remain’s seriously ill: doctors
LONDON, Oct 20, (AFP): Pakistani schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai has stood up with help for the first time since she was shot in the head by the Taleban but remains seriously ill, doctors treating her at a British hospital said Friday.
Malala is unable to talk due to the breathing tube inserted into her windpipe but she can communicate by writing, said Dave Rosser, the medical director at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, central England.
The teenager escaped certain death by a matter of centimetres (inches), with the bullet grazing the edge of her brain, he said.
The hospital released a first picture of Malala, in her hospital bed, clutching a teddy bear.
“Malala is still showing some signs of infection... in the bullet track which is our key source of concern,” Rosser told reporters outside the hospital.
“It’s clear that she is not out of the woods yet.
“Having said that, she is doing very well. In fact, she was standing with some help for the first time this morning when I went in to see her.”
In an attack which outraged the world, Malala was shot on a school bus in the former Taleban stronghold of Pakistan’s Swat valley on Oct 9 as a punishment for campaigning for the right of girls to an education.
On Monday she was flown in an air ambulance from Pakistan to Birmingham in a medically-induced coma, and taken to the highly specialised hospital where staff have extensive experience of treating British soldiers seriously wounded in Afghanistan.
Rosser explained that Malala’s airway became swollen after the bullet passed through it, so doctors inserted a tracheotomy tube to protect it.
The tube means she cannot speak but there is no reason to believe she would be unable to talk once it is removed, which may happen in the coming days.
She has movement in her arms and legs and is “communicating very freely — she is writing,” Rosser said.
“Malala is keen that I thank people for their support,” he added, after thousands of people left messages for her on the hospital’s website.
With the schoolgirl’s permission, the hospital gave a full breakdown of her injuries, condition and the slow path to her possible recovery.
Rosser explained how the bullet passed through the face of the girl, who the hospital now say is 15 although she has previously been described as 14.
“The bullet grazed the edge of her brain. Certainly if you’re talking a couple of inches more central, then it’s almost certainly an unsurvivable injury,” he said.
Shot at point blank range, the bullet hit her left brow, but instead of penetrating her skull it travelled beneath the skin down the left side of her head.
The shock wave shattered the thinnest bone of her skull and fragments were driven into her brain.
The bullet damaged soft tissues at the base of her jaw and in her neck, which the bullet travelled through before lodging in the tissues above her left shoulder blade.