Updated
Updated · WWNY · Jun 15
Florida Teen Survives 1-Week Vibrio Hospitalization After Park Swim
Updated
Updated · WWNY · Jun 15

Florida Teen Survives 1-Week Vibrio Hospitalization After Park Swim

3 articles · Updated · WWNY · Jun 15

Summary

  • Joziah Thompson, 17, returned home June 10 after a week in the hospital and multiple surgeries for a Vibrio vulnificus infection contracted while swimming June 1 at Lion’s Park in Niceville, Florida.
  • A minor leg scratch turned critical within two days, and doctors transferred him from Twin Cities Hospital to Studer Family Children’s Hospital in Pensacola for emergency surgery to remove infected tissue.
  • Thompson remains on aggressive antibiotics and still faces risks including renewed infection and heart issues, according to his mother.
  • His mother is urging local officials to track and publicize bacteria levels in public waters after the case.
  • Florida recorded 33 Vibrio vulnificus cases in 2025, with five deaths; the bacteria can enter through open wounds in warm, brackish coastal water and become life-threatening.

Insights

A teen was maimed after a swim. Why aren't public beaches tested for this deadly flesh-eating bacteria?
As flesh-eating bacteria spread with warming seas, which US coastlines could become the next high-risk zones?