Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Crash Victim Who Crawled Up Snowbank To Save Daughter Loses Feet To Frostbite

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Feb, 2016 01:39 PM
    WINNIPEG — An injured Manitoba woman who crawled up a snowbank to seek help after spending overnight in a frigid ditch trying to keep her young daughter warm has lost her feet to frostbite.
     
    Kristen Hiebert and four-year-old Avery were going home last month when their car slid off a rural highway near a bridge and rolled down a steep slope to the frozen Souris River.
     
    The spent the night huddled together for 10 hours as temperatures dipped to -23 C.
     
    At dawn, Hiebert dragged herself up the snowbank despite a broken leg, broken neck and severe frostbite to her bare feet.
     
    Her friend, Morgan Campbell, says Hiebert's feet had to be amputated last week.
     
    Campbell says on a GoFundMe page that Hiebert's family is overwhelmed but buoyed by public support.
     
    "Kristen is overcome with emotion by all of the love shown towards her and her family," Campbell wrote. "She sends her sincerest gratitude to everyone who has donated, sent kind thoughts, words and prayers.
     
    "She is in awe of your compassion. You have made their ability to recover achievable."
     
    Avery has been discharged from hospital and "is doing wonderful" as she recovers from frostbite on one foot, Campbell wrote. Hiebert continues to heal and the frostbite on her right hand is showing improvement, she added.
     
    "She is quite amazing," Campbell wrote. "Her feeding tube will be removed soon, but her biggest irritant is the neck brace she has to wear constantly for the next while."
     
    The GoFundMe page set up to help Hiebert — a single mom who worked two jobs cleaning homes and a hotel — has raised just over $64,000 so far.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Flirtatious Emails To Jian Ghomeshi After Alleged Attacks Were Bait, Woman Says

    Flirtatious Emails To Jian Ghomeshi After Alleged Attacks Were Bait, Woman Says
    TORONTO — A woman who testified to going to great lengths to avoid any contact with Jian Ghomeshi after he allegedly attacked her acknowledged during intense cross-examination Tuesday that she sent him flirtatious emails.

    Flirtatious Emails To Jian Ghomeshi After Alleged Attacks Were Bait, Woman Says

    Justin Trudeau To Visit Struggling Alberta Where Oil Sector Seeks Support For Pipelines

    Justin Trudeau To Visit Struggling Alberta Where Oil Sector Seeks Support For Pipelines
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau travels Wednesday to Alberta, where the battered oil sector will be looking for strong signals that Ottawa is serious about helping them deliver their controversial commodity to tidewater.

    Justin Trudeau To Visit Struggling Alberta Where Oil Sector Seeks Support For Pipelines

    Tax Agency Doesn't Even Know What It Shared Improperly With Spy Agency

    Tax Agency Doesn't Even Know What It Shared Improperly With Spy Agency
    The federal revenue agency says it doesn't know what sort of taxpayer information a rogue employee improperly shared with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service because CSIS has wiped the files from its database.

    Tax Agency Doesn't Even Know What It Shared Improperly With Spy Agency

    Cecilia Laurent, Quebec Woman Believed To Have Just Turned 120 Likes Cartoons

    Cecilia Laurent, Quebec Woman Believed To Have Just Turned 120 Likes Cartoons
    Her 28-year-old great-grandson, Ronald Chery, says only three of Laurent's 12 children are still alive, with the eldest in her 80s.

    Cecilia Laurent, Quebec Woman Believed To Have Just Turned 120 Likes Cartoons

    Quebec Taxi Industry Seeks Injunction Against Uber

    Quebec Taxi Industry Seeks Injunction Against Uber
    Uber's drivers are breaking the law and the company's services are illegal, lawyer Marc-Antoine Cloutier told a news conference outside the Montreal courthouse

    Quebec Taxi Industry Seeks Injunction Against Uber

    Oil Industry Group Says Trans Mountain Panel Subjected To 'Abuse' From Opponents

    Oil Industry Group Says Trans Mountain Panel Subjected To 'Abuse' From Opponents
    A vice-president at the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers says some criticism of the Trans Mountain pipeline review process has been shameful and even abusive.

    Oil Industry Group Says Trans Mountain Panel Subjected To 'Abuse' From Opponents