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Prem Jeet, just 18 years old and full of a young man’s quiet ambitions, was on his way from Okhla to a computer science class in Badarpur. He was standing near the back gate of a bus. But as he attempted to step off, with one foot still on the bus and the other seeking the ground, the driver suddenly accelerated. Prem Jeet fell violently to the asphalt, his world instantly fading into pitch blackness as consciousness slipped away.
When he arrived at St. Stephen’s Hospital, he was hanging onto life by a thread. The sheer force of the impact had shattered his body: he suffered a severe head injury, a deep coma, fractures crippling his arms and legs, and internal bleeding pooling in his chest.
Looking at the unresponsive 18-year-old boy, whose family was already facing immense hardships, the entire ward rallied around him with fierce determination. They refused to let his story end there.
What followed was a relentless, exhausting battle against a tide of complications. Prem Jeet’s body was a battleground: he fought off severe infections, underwent intense leg surgery, and relied entirely on a ventilator and a tracheostomy just to take a breath. Through it all, the team worked day and night without pausing. As Dr. Vineet beautifully reflects, “It is our duty to keep treating. Whether it is beneficial or not.”
Then, on the seventh agonizing day, the silent darkness broke – Prem Jeet opened his eyes. In that singular moment, the team realized their grueling hard work had not been in vain.
His healing steadily transformed from a medical impossibility into a profound miracle. After roughly 21 days, he finally breathed completely on his own, freed from the ventilator. Though he left the hospital doors bound to a wheelchair, the next time he returned to see his doctors, he did what once seemed unimaginable: he walked in on his own two feet.
Today, looking at him, you would never guess the shattering darkness he survived. There are no outward signs of the trauma or the weeks spent trapped in a coma.