Posted on 08/04/2005 5:49:22 PM PDT by rwfromkansas
For 20 years, Sarah Scantlin was seemingly unaware of the world around her after she was hit by a drunk driver in an accident that sent her into a comatose state in September of 1984.
Then in February, she shocked her parents and doctors when she began to speak. In her first national television interview, after undergoing surgery on her long-unused limbs and speech therapy to unlock her long-dormant tongue, Scantlin speaks with The Early Show national correspondent Tracy Smith in a two-part interview to be broadcast Thursday and Friday.
Smith also speaks with Sarah's parents, Jim and Betsy Scantlin, who never imagined they would talk to their daughter again.
In a February interview on The Early Show , Sarahs father recounted the phone call he and his wife got, informing them of the unimaginable.
"It was amazing. I'm in the living room. Betsy was in the computer area, and the phone rings ... and suddenly, I'm aware that there's a profound, distinct difference. Rather than speaking about Sarah, it became very clear she [Sarahs nurse] was speaking to Sarah. It was the most amazing feeling in the world," he said.
The 1984 accident occurred when Scantlin was crossing the street in her hometown of Hutchinson, Kan. She suffered a massive brain injury and could not breathe on her own. Smith speaks with New York neurologist Randolph Marshall, who says that people like Scantlin rarely awake from such an injury. "You only hear about these cases very rarely and theyre always a surprise when they actually come to light," he says.
Scantlins speech is still limited.
However, it seems that throughout her 20-year coma, she could see, hear, and understand what was going on around her. Shortly after she awoke, her father asked what she knew about events that had occurred years earlier.
"Sarah, what's 9/11?" her father asks. She responds, "Bad fire airplanes building hurt people."
Smith says there are other things deep in Scantlins brain that also survived the accident, such things as her favorite 1980s song "Summer Lovin," which she even sings for The Early Show.
Paging Michael Savage....
She wasn't brain-dead; a difference that would show up compared to your brain scan.
If she couldn't breathe on her own, she must have been on a respirator...that's truly a massive brain injury, because breathing is the one of the most basic brain functions...
Yes. Theirs comes out "airplane, building, freedom fighters, root causes, understanding, bush lied, people died."
It is great news!
It screams out for the right to life and is an indictment of the culture of death, of Michael Schiavo, and of his evil legal allies in the court system , etc
I am barely remembering now a story about someone telling Terry Schiavo that her plug was being pulled again (for the second and last time) and their account that she struggled to make her wishes known. Of course, this was discounted by those who said she was in a permanent PVS, and what was being witnessed was simply 'autonomic response mechanisms.'
Because I was in the kitchen during dinner hour tonight I had to 'endure' network news, and not the news on the cable TV in the living room, but I was quite surprised the networks covered the story as they did. They did not suggest apologies for their stance on Terry's PVS, but it was as if they now had second thoughts by running this story and actually seemed to celebrate this lady's return from her 'coma'.
I was surprised CBS had the story on the morning show today, on the Evening News tonight, and they will even talk to the whole family tomorrow on the morning show again.
But, I am sure it will not go hardly anywhere else after this.
Just an amazing story.
Oh my!
Shuddering here that he recalls so keenly.
wow
Yeah......shocking, huh!
They are even playing it up more tomorrow on the morning show, talking to the lady and her family.
No doubt....
So she missed the Clinton years.
God is merciful.
lol
...she could see, hear, and understand what was going on around her
I'm sorry, but this sounds like something out of a horror movie. I think I would go insane if I had to endure something like that for 20 years.
i would definitely lose it. all those thoughts rattling around in her head, and she could not vocalize her own feelings...the horror...seriously.
but the difference between her and schiavo is that schiavo was BRAIN DEAD. no activity...did they say if this lady had activity on brain scans? i am not saying that i think schiavo should have had her feeding tube pulled, but just noting the difference.
Terry Schindler was not brain dead, but brain damaged. There's a big difference. Read some of the stories about the brain dead woman who just delivered a baby, and whose body was kept functioning until the baby's chances of survival were high enough. When she was disconnected from the machines, she died fairly quickly, which is the case when true brain death has happened. Because Terry, on the other hand, was not brain dead, she had to be starved in order to get her to die.
There is a difference of course, which is why I never linked this to Terri when I posted.
Still, Terri should have been able to live.
Ping.
Later pingout.
Once upon a time I was in a coma, only for a week fortunately. I knew everything that was going on. It was the strangest thing I've ever been through. Tried my hardest just to wiggle a finger but couldn't. But, I could hear everything that everyone said. Ticked me off when the doctor told my husband I was most likely going to die and to get things in order. I knew my time wasn't up and I wasn't going anywhere. It really ticked me off.
A couple of months later, when I had my strength back, I had a talk with the doctor. Told him to watch what he says in front of patients. He was a bit surprised when I told him some of the things I remembered. The human mind, body and spirt is the most amazing thing.
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