TORONTO -- An Abbotsford, B.C. woman who was placed in a coma due to complications from COVID-19 and gave birth while in the coma is speaking publicly for the first time about the experience and her recovery.

In an interview with Ā鶹“«Ć½, Gillian McIntosh said she and her newborn son Travis are back home and doing well, and want to thank the hospital staff for saving both of their lives.

ā€œIā€™m incredibly grateful for everybody at the hospital who has helped get me back on track and make sure that my son was healthy and that weā€™re all here together,ā€ she said in the interview.

ā€œEvery nurse from the beginning to the end ā€¦ they were all so amazing. I canā€™t say enough about true support and genuine care that they all gave to me.ā€

McIntosh tested positive for COVID-19 on Nov. 6 while nearly 36 weeks pregnant, and was admitted to hospital a few days later. On Nov. 10, doctors decided she needed a ventilator and performed an emergency C-section as her condition deteriorated.

ā€œFrom that point on, I donā€™t remember full details of even leaving the ER, but then waking up four weeks later having had my son,ā€ she said.

Baby Travis would spend the next 15 days in the Abbotsford Hospitalā€™s neonatal intensive care unit while his mother remained in a coma.  

ā€œI woke up and the nurse told me that I had been in a coma for four weeks, and that they had delivered the baby by emergency C-section and that I had a son, and that was pretty exciting because we didnā€™t know what the gender was,ā€ she said.

ā€œFrom that point on, I spent my time recovering in the hospital, relearning to walk again, the things you take for granted every day, you had to redo.ā€

McIntosh was finally able to leave the hospital on Christmas Eve, where she is now recovering and taking care of her baby.

ā€œI missed the first six weeks of his life, but I also missed that first six weeks of that painful new parent sleeping routine,ā€ she joked.

Overall, McIntosh said Travis is doing well.

ā€œHeā€™s great,ā€ she said. ā€œHeā€™s four months old today and heā€™s thriving. Heā€™s quite the little butterball and growing very nicely.ā€

As for herself, McIntosh said her voice has become raspy due to the extended intubation but her normal voice will hopefully return this year. Sheā€™s also doing physio therapyand occupational therapy several times a week as she regains her strength.

ā€œIā€™m basically healthy except my lungs do have some issues, but that will be an ongoing situation,ā€ she said.

She only just stopped usinga cane last week, but says sheā€™s ā€œtaking every day as it comes.ā€

ā€œThe fact that Iā€™ve been recovering so well to this point is really a huge miracle,ā€ she said.

With files from Ā鶹“«Ć½ Vancouver