A mom who gave birth while in a medically-induced coma due to the coronavirus has finally brought her baby home.

Angela Primachenko, 27, a respiratory therapist from Vancouver, Washington, tested positive for the disease on March 24 and, as her symptoms worsened, was soon put into a coma in intensive care.

On April 1, she gave birth to daughter Ava, Primachenko’s second child – but has no memory of the event, she told Today.

Five days after giving birth, Primachenko’s condition had improved enough for her to be taken off the ventilator, People reported.

And on April 16, following two negative coronavirus tests, the mother held her baby for the first time.

"Crying right now!!! IM COVA FREE!!! And holding my baby girl in my hands!" she wrote on Instagram.

http://instagr.am/p/B_BQCpnnF5m

Primachenko posted another adorable photo of herself and her daughter cuddling for the first time in the NICU, saying it was "such a testimony to be able to hold my little Ava" but that she still had to wait a little longer to bring the newborn home.

http://instagr.am/p/B_BY28THkiz

Four days later, the moment the family had been waiting for finally arrived: Ava came home.

http://instagr.am/p/B_DZyCfAUDq

"The last few weeks have been filled with so much unexpected change in my life ... and I feel like I can write a novel ... but for tonight I'll just write that life is good, and let's find the good in everyday," Primachenko wrote on Instagram.

http://instagr.am/p/B_MCgtXnog_

The newborn, whose name means "breath of life," also got to meet her older sister Emily who, alongside the girls' father, tested negative for the coronavirus.