You probably remember the summer incident in which a young girl was hit by a foul ball at a Houston baseball game, a line drive that came off the bat of Chicago’s Albert Almora, Jr. Footage captured at the time showed a visibly distraught Almora struggling to regain his composure after watching the ball hit the child, while the incident again brought extending safety netting at MLB ballparks into the national spotlight.

Turns out the girl who was struck back then is still being treated for what her attorney describes as a “permanent” brain injury.

Via The Houston Chronicle:

The 2½-year-old girl who suffered a skull fracture when hit in the head by a foul ball at an Astros game May 29 continues to be treated for a brain injury that has left her at lasting risk for seizures, an attorney representing the girl’s family said.

Attorney Richard Mithoff, who represents the child’s family, said the girl continues to receive anti-seizure medication more than seven months after she was struck by a line drive off the bat of Chicago Cubs player Albert Almora at Minute Maid Park.

“She (the child) has an injury to a part of the brain, and it is permanent,” Mithoff said. “She remains subject to seizures and is on medication and will be, perhaps, for the rest of her life. That may or may not be resolved.”

The lawyer goes on to say that the girl has central nervous system issues akin to what a stroke victim would experience. She was struck in the back of her head by the baseball while sitting on her grandfather’s lap when Almora fouled off the pitch.

All 30 MLB teams are extending their netting as a result of this and other incidents that have taken place in recent years. In a December email to season ticket holders, the Phillies confirmed that safety netting will now “extend most of the way down each baseline to section 109 (right field line) and section 138 (left field line).” Netting behind the dugouts and down the baselines additionally will be raised to 25 feet and colored green to blend in with the playing field, looking something like this:

As for the little girl in Houston, the Chronicle story goes on to say that doctors have yet to determine if she’s suffered “cognitive deficits” as a result of her injury.