The New Zealand Herald

Hollie looks on way to miraculous recovery

- Leah Tebbutt

There is a long road ahead but a miraculous full recovery is expected for young crash victim Hollie Snell.

The 16-year-old was involved in a two-car fatal crash on November 18. She had head injuries so severe her family was told she would not survive.

Due to Hollie’s wishes, the family spent the first week preparing to donate her organs, her heartfelt story shared on the front page of the

Rotorua Daily Post on Saturday, November 24. But after day 12 in hospital, Hollie, showing signs of improvemen­t, was taken off life support and moved to the high dependency unit.

Now, after 23 days in hospital, she has reached level two of the recovery stages of critical brain injuries.

“Hollie has now been moved down to the neuro ward in Waikato Hospital. She is having some responses to commands such as squeezing your hand, moving a leg, small periods where her eyes are open and can focus on us,” Hollie’s mother, Dale, said in a Facebook post.

Levels of coma range from very deep, where a patient will show no response to pain, to shallow levels where a patient can respond to pain by movement or opening their eyes or may make some response to speech.

The family hope in the next three weeks Hollie will be transferre­d to Auckland to the brain injury centre.

“We expect a full recovery for Hollie, however it may take considerab­le time. We now have a slightly clearer pathway but we are also fully aware that this is a rollercoas­ter journey, full of loads of onestep-forward and two-steps-back moments,” Dale said.

Hollie’s sister, Larnie Woodward, told the Daily Post the family was now praying for a quick, full recovery.

“We are obviously ecstatic that she’s come this far and we are excited to watch her progress.

“It’s a miracle she is alive and we feel as though our prayers and everyone else’s have been answered.”

Hollie is still breathing through an assisted tracheosto­my but the family hope she will be weaned off that this week.

Dale said occupation­al therapy and physio had started to stimulate Hollie’s senses and help with recovery.

“[They] have started with small things like showing her familiar pics,

asking her to respond to our voices via small movements and getting her upright via a tilt table every few days,” she said.

Hollie is being feed through a gastric tube in her nose and has long periods of sleep, vital to her recovery.

Her mother said those who visited should hold her hand or talk about familiar things, helping Hollie connect to her world.

More than three weeks ago, the teen was travelling between Rotorua and her hometown, Te Puke, when

involved in a crash on State Highway 33 at Okere Falls. An occupant of the other car died at the scene.

Woodward said at the time that as long at there was hope the family would hold on.

“We don’t know what’s going to happen but we know the prayers and support from around the country have had some power.”

Dale said the family was a long way from an easy pathway but they were doing well.

 ??  ?? Hollie Snell was not expected to survive severe head injuries after a car crash but her family says the teen continues her astonishin­g fightback.
Hollie Snell was not expected to survive severe head injuries after a car crash but her family says the teen continues her astonishin­g fightback.

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