Will’s mother Sara Coen says three words saved her young son when his organ’s started to fail

Will is urging people to ‘listen to their bodies’ (Collect/PA Real Life)
Will is urging people to ‘listen to their bodies’ (Collect/PA Real Life)

The mother of a 15-year-old boy who collapsed from heat stroke during a run in the woods and developed multi-organ failure has said an app “helped save her son’s life”. In July 2024, Sarah Coen’s youngest son, Will, now 16, decided to join his brother George, now 22, on a 10km run in the nearby woods – and since they are “sporty and healthy boys”, Sarah did not think much of it.

However, approximately 6km into the run, in temperatures of around 20C, Will started to feel “confused” and disorientated – and he soon collapsed and fell unconscious, with George calling Sarah to say she needed to phone 999 immediately. Describing this as “one of the most terrifying moments of (her) life”, Sarah called the emergency services, but since she did not know their exact location in the woods, and she had poor phone signal, they could not dispatch an ambulance straightaway.

Thankfully, George had downloaded the what3words app years earlier, which provides a simple way to communicate precise locations, and with this information she was able to direct the emergency services to her sons. Lincs & Notts Air Ambulance (LNAA) was subsequently dispatched to the rescue, transporting Will to hospital, where it was discovered he had liver and kidney failure, caused by exertional heat stroke (EHS).

Will in hospital (Collect/PA Real Life)

Sarah, who is now retired and lives in Lincolnshire, said that, without what3words, Will may not have survived, and she “cannot describe how grateful” she is for the medical care he received. She told PA Real Life: “I just felt completely helpless.

“I’m glad that George was with him, but I was completely helpless, I didn’t know where he was, I couldn’t look after him. I just fell to pieces. I would urge and encourage anyone to download what3words – it helped save my son’s life.”

In July last year, the Coen family had just returned from a holiday to Egypt and were settling back into life at home. With George training for the army at the time, he suggested going on a 10km run on the morning of July 29 and Will decided to join him.

Although it was warm – around 20C – Sarah said she was not concerned about the weather, as they had just experienced 40-degree heat in Egypt. Speaking about the first few kilometres, Will said: “It was tough, definitely, don’t get me wrong, but I didn’t feel like I was about to die.

Sarah with Will in hospital (Collect/PA Real Life)

“We started setting off and then I noticed some warning signs, which I probably should have paid more attention to.”

According to the NHS, heat stroke is a potentially life-threatening condition and can cause the following symptoms – tiredness, weakness, feeling faint, muscle cramps and feeling or being sick. At around 6km, Will said he started to feel “cloudy in (his) mind” and “super hazy”, and George called Sarah, asking if she could pick them up at a specified meeting point.

After pushing on for another 500m, however, Will lost his balance, collapsed and fell unconscious, and George called Sarah again to say she needed to dial 999 immediately. Sarah said: “I was trying to explain to the lady in the ambulance service what had happened, but she was saying: ‘Is the patient breathing?’ And I just said, ‘I don’t know, I don’t know what’s going on.’

“It was absolutely horrendous … and for some reason, my phone didn’t have location services on.”

In the meantime, two dog walkers had come across the brothers and they helped moved Will into the shade, removing his clothing and pouring four litres of water over him to cool his body down. At this point, George remembered he had the what3words app, and he decided to leave Will with the two strangers and run to Sarah to show her the address to give to the emergency services.

The app that saved Will’s life

The what3words system divides the world into a grid of 3m by 3m squares and gives each square a unique combination of three words, with the technology used by more than 85% of the UK’s emergency services. As an example, ///glorified.pack.offer marks the entrance to LNAA’s headquarters.

After George ran to share the what3words address with Sarah, she then told the emergency services and LNAA was dispatched. “At this point, it had been an hour that he’d been unconscious,” Sarah said. “Had I downloaded what3words all those years ago, the ambulance would have been there half an hour earlier.”

Sarah said the ambulance staff determined Will had collapsed from heat stroke, which was causing concern for a potential cardiac arrest. They put him under general anaesthetic in the woods and transported him to the closest hospital on a ventilator, which was Queen’s Medical Centre in Nottingham.

There, doctors later diagnosed him with acute liver failure and kidney failure, saying it had been caused by EHS, and he was subsequently transferred to Ward 8 at Birmingham Children’s Hospital for a potential liver transplant. “I just couldn’t believe it was happening,” Sarah said. “Liver failure can go one of two ways – it either spontaneously starts to recover or you need a transplant.

“Luckily, Will’s liver took a turn for the better and he started to improve, and we were sent home four days later.”

Will now volunteers with Lincs & Notts Air Ambulance (Collect/PA Real Life)

Will underwent regular check-ups after being discharged from hospital but has since made a full recovery and does not require any medication. He has returned to school and is back playing sports, and he and Sarah have started volunteering with LNAA to help raise more awareness and funds, as it receives no direct Government funding and requires more than £10 million annually to operate.

Will wants to urge other people, particularly during the warm weather in the summer, to “listen to their bodies” and stop physical activity if they notice any unusual symptoms. For Sarah, she believes it should be “a standard” to have what3words on phones and she is urging everyone to download it.

“I will never forget the terror of not being able to explain to the ambulance where we were,” Sarah said. “If I could have just said the what3words from the get-go, the ambulance could have been with us 20 to 25 minutes sooner and Will might have avoided half of this. I dread to think what would have happened if George didn’t have the app on his phone… but he’s here now, and that’s all that matters.”

George added: “I’m so happy that Will has recovered now and really grateful for the help that everyone gave at the time.”

Head of operations at LNAA, Laura Evans, said: “What3words enables our crews to locate a patient much more accurately than a postcode. This means that the crew can potentially be by the side of the patient faster, especially in remote locations such as in the woodland where our doctor and paramedic treated Will.

“We often respond to emergencies in rural and coastal areas and this where what3words really comes into effect for us.”

Share.
Exit mobile version