Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Dead Indian American Woman Hinal Patel, 22, Was To Go To Medical School

IANS, 28 Jul, 2015 11:53 AM
    A New Jersey-based Indian American woman emergency health worker, who died when a car slammed into her ambulance on July 25, was all set to go to medical school from July 27, media reports said.
     
    Hinal Patel, 22, a medical student at Rutgers University, New Jersey, was cremated on Tuesday.
     
    Patel's family said she wanted to be a doctor or a physician assistant and was set to got to medical school from July 27, Dayton Daily News newspaper reported.
     
    Patel's family and friends remembered her at the funeral in New Brunswick attended by emergency responders from across the state.
     
    "She was the most amazing person I ever knew. She has saved thousands and thousands of people..I just wish someone had a chance to help her," her friend Bianca Patel was quoted as saying.
     
    Hinal's brother Neel said she really loved medicine and was truly passionate about the job.
     
    "Patel and the her ambulance's driver, Mark Seube, were responding to a call when they came through the intersection and were struck by a Toyota vehicle sending their spinning vehicle careening into another car," East Brunswick policeman Lt. Kevin F. Zebro was was quoted as saying.
     
    "This resulted in her death while the drivers of the ambulance and Toyota vehicle sustained non-life threatening injuries," he added.
     
    Police have not arrested or charged anyone in the fatal accident. Patel was working as an emergency health worker for the North Stelton Volunteer Fire Company since September 2012.
     
    "Hinal was a very smart, dedicated member of our family and she will be greatly missed," a company statement read.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Drivers With Fibromyalgia More Likely To Be In Serious Traffic Crashes: Study

    Drivers With Fibromyalgia More Likely To Be In Serious Traffic Crashes: Study
    TORONTO — Drivers who have been diagnosed with fibromyalgia appear to have an elevated risk of being involved in motor vehicle crashes, even years after their initial diagnosis, research suggests.

    Drivers With Fibromyalgia More Likely To Be In Serious Traffic Crashes: Study

    Eyes On Toronto Riding As Tory Defector Eve Adams Fights For Liberal Nomination

    Eyes On Toronto Riding As Tory Defector Eve Adams Fights For Liberal Nomination
    TORONTO — A former Conservative MP, personally welcomed into the Liberal fold by Justin Trudeau, finds out this weekend if she gets to take on Finance Minister Joe Oliver in the looming federal election.

    Eyes On Toronto Riding As Tory Defector Eve Adams Fights For Liberal Nomination

    Timing May Be Right For Toronto To Bid On 2024 Olympics, Observers Say

    Timing May Be Right For Toronto To Bid On 2024 Olympics, Observers Say
    TORONTO — The man who helped Vancouver land the 2010 Winter Games has some advice for Toronto if it wants to be Canada's next Olympic host city — strike while the iron is hot.

    Timing May Be Right For Toronto To Bid On 2024 Olympics, Observers Say

    Top Soldier To Hold Summit On Sexual Misconduct In Canadian Forces

    Top Soldier To Hold Summit On Sexual Misconduct In Canadian Forces
    OTTAWA — A summit for military brass will be held next month to determine the path forward to eradicate sexual assault and harassment in the Canadian Forces, Canada's newly-minted top general said Thursday.

    Top Soldier To Hold Summit On Sexual Misconduct In Canadian Forces

    New Law Enacts Tough Penalties For Killing Police Dogs And Service Animals

    On Thursday, Tim Uppal, the federal minister of state for multiculturalism, met with Edmonton police officers to mark the enactment of Quanto's Law.

    New Law Enacts Tough Penalties For Killing Police Dogs And Service Animals

    PM Harper Meets Abolition Champ Wall As Pressure Rises To Articulate Plan For Senate

    PM Harper Meets Abolition Champ Wall As Pressure Rises To Articulate Plan For Senate
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper will meet today with Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall to discuss forest fires but he may find himself trying to douse the flames of another disaster: the Senate.

    PM Harper Meets Abolition Champ Wall As Pressure Rises To Articulate Plan For Senate