Twelve-year-old stabilized after dramatic skiing accident in Innsbruck

Transparenz: Redaktionell erstellt und geprüft.
Veröffentlicht am

After a skiing accident in St. Johann, Tyrol, a twelve-year-old girl was stabilized after a three-hour search and flown to the clinic.

Twelve-year-old stabilized after dramatic skiing accident in Innsbruck

A twelve-year-old girl from Germany suffered serious injuries in a dramatic skiing accident in St. Johann in Tirol. On February 15th, she hit the end of the slope while skiing and fell over the edge. According to initial reports, the girl was discovered in a ditch, 200 meters below a hilltop, with several broken bones and multiple trauma during a search operation that lasted several hours. The father had lost sight of his daughter and was worried when she didn't return to the elevator as expected. He then alerted the rescue workers who assisted him, and the Alpine police and mountain rescue were immediately mobilized to find the girl, which was finally carried out by a helicopter after more than three hours.

Fortunately, the spokesman for the Innsbruck clinic, Johannes Schwamberger, announced that the girl's health had stabilized and her life was no longer in acute danger. The twelve-year-old is awake and continues to receive intensive medical care. Loud Small newspaper Her injuries, which included hypothermia, have left her in a critical situation, but it now appears that she will survive the accident without serious sequelae. The circumstances of the accident indicate that the girl may have slipped over the end of the slope at high speed and there was no foul play, which made the rescue operation even more important as she lay unconscious in the ditch for some time.

The shockwaves over this tragic incident are being felt throughout the community, but the focus remains on the girl's recovery while the investigation into the exact circumstances of the accident is still ongoing, according to reports from the APA. Intensive care in the clinic is essential for a complete recovery.