THAM LUANG CAVES, Thailand -- All 12 boys and their coach of a youth soccer team have been rescued from a cave in Thailand, reported CNN on Tuesday. 

Divers begun the third phase of rescue efforts to remove the last members of the youth soccer team from the flooded cave, along with the coach, on Tuesday.  

The boys from the Wild Boars soccer team were trapped for more than two weeks in the cave. The team who worked to rescue them included 19 divers.   

Divers started their last mission around 11 p.m. EST, Monday.  Over the past few days, the 12 boys, ages 12 to 16, have been removed from the cave. 

Doctors have kept the ones who have been rescued in the last few days, not including the ones saved on Tuesday, isolated in a hospital due to their high risk of infection and not even their parents can see them yet.  

Officials say two of the boys appear to show signs of a lung infection, but doctors say they are now able to eat normal food.  

Another concern is their mental state. Psychiatrist will be keeping a close eye on them to monitor any signs of PTSD.    

"The psychological toll that must've taken on those children for two weeks being inside that cave, not knowing if they were going to survive, that's going to be something they're going to live with," Dr. Patrick Mularoni, an emergency physician at Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital. 

The young boys were trapped and stayed on a dry shelf deep inside the flooded cave. The group has been there since Saturday, June 23, when monsoon rains flooded the cave complex they were exploring with their coach after a soccer practice.   

The boys and their coach were not the only ones who were in the cave. A medic and three Thai Navy SEALS have been with them since they were discovered will also be rescued. They too have left the cave.