A 20-year-old college student fractured her skull and had a part of her leg amputated below the knee after she lost her footing and ended up trapped underneath a moving train in Boston.
Ava Harlow, from Amesbury, has been undergoing treatment at Brigham and Women’s Hospital since the night of the accident more than a week ago, loved ones wrote on a GoFundmePage.
According to officials with the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) police, at around 11:30 p.m. Jan. 27, Harlow got off a Green Line train at the BU Central Station in Boston with a group of friends, but then she realized that a few other companions remained on the train, reported the Boston Globe.
Harlow knocked on the window to signal for her pals to get off the train and took a step in the direction in which the train was moving.
At that moment, Harlow somehow slipped and fell under the train, which dragged her.
Specially trained firefighters were summoned to rescue the Bridgewater State University student. EMS, Boston police and MBTA police also responded.
Harlow’s father, Andrew Harlow, recalled getting “the dreaded 3 a.m. phone call that no parent wants to receive” informing him that his daughter had been struck by a train.
The dad tearfully told CBS Bostont that his daughter had to be resuscitated twice before she was brought to an ICU and intubated.
Ava lost a part of one leg and broke the other. She also suffered a fractured skull, a crushed pelvis, a broken arm and cuts to her face requiring stitches, according to her father.
But despite the laundry list of injuries, Andrew Harlow said, Ava is filled with gratitude toward the firefighters and paramedics who helped save her life.
“The first thing she mentioned after she was extubated was the guys,” he said, adding that he would like to thank the first responders who tied his daughter’s tourniquet and revived her.
Meanwhile, a group of family friends calling themselves Ava’s “aunties” have launched a GoFundMe campaign to help with her medical bills and living expenses.
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