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US Nurse Suffers Devastating Facial Injuries in Krabi Moped Crash

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Picture courtesy of Boston 25 News

 

A heart-stopping vacation horror in Krabi, Thailand, as an American ICU nurse sees her holiday flip into a nightmare moped crash, leaving her with catastrophic facial injuries.

 

Sierra Fairhurst, a 24-year-old from Massachusetts, was cruising with friends when darkness engulfed her journey, resulting in shattered facial bones and lost teeth. Struggling in a local hospital with unsatisfactory conditions, the situation grew worse when her passport vanished, stalling vital medical transfers.

 

Despite the chaos, her mother, Zoe Rose, and brother rushed to her side, encountering hospital rooms with pigeons and inadequate facilities. "Physically, you can see that her nose is over to the side; physically, she doesn’t have any teeth; her chin was kind of removed, but it’s now back on, and her eyelid was gone, but that’s now on,"

 

Rose lamented about her daughter's condition. A GoFundMe page, aiming to ease the financial burden of medical expenses and recovery, has been established to help Sierra’s family during this challenging time.

 

 

 

Compounded by lost identification, transferring Sierra to a better hospital in Bangkok for further treatment seemed impossible, yet the US Embassy hustled a new passport to re-ignite her recovery journey.

 

Finally flown to Bangkok for urgent surgeries, Sierra returned safely to the US by March 27th. Boston Logan International Airport marked the start of her stateside healing journey, ushering in a series of appointments with specialists to address her severe injuries, with ongoing costs potentially reaching thousands of Thai Baht.

 

Her mother remains thankful that Sierra is alive to tell the tale. As Sierra soldiers through recovery, her spirit shines brighter, pressing on through physical scars with hopes of returning to her everyday life and the healthcare field.

 

This incident underscores the critical importance of careful travel planning and safety precautions on international adventures, highlighting the vital role of community support in times of crisis.

 

Based on a story by The Thaiger

 

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-- 2025-04-03

 

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  • BritManToo
    BritManToo

    A full face helmet is essential if you want to keep your face!

  • Smokin Joe
    Smokin Joe

    Possibly she has good insurance but can't use it because she didn't have a motorcycle license.

  • encountering hospital rooms with pigeons and inadequate   Umm pigeons in hospitals?  Mybe she was taken to a Vet by mistake ?

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  • Popular Post

Never will understand tourists who rent a bike, unskilled with the bike, unskilled on the roads...........wait which side am I on?

  • Popular Post

A full face helmet is essential if you want to keep your face!

  • Popular Post

I hope she had travel insurance......

  • Popular Post

encountering hospital rooms with pigeons and inadequate

 

Umm pigeons in hospitals?  Mybe she was taken to a Vet by mistake ?

  • Popular Post
23 minutes ago, flyingtlger said:

I hope she had travel insurance......

 

Possibly she has good insurance but can't use it because she didn't have a motorcycle license.

  • Popular Post
31 minutes ago, flyingtlger said:

I hope she had travel insurance......

Must have.  She was already flown back to the US.  Given her condition it seems like it must have been a special medical flight.

  • Popular Post
53 minutes ago, BritManToo said:

A full face helmet is essential if you want to keep your face!

Absolutely 💯 %

  • Popular Post

Many of us drive motorcycles or scooters here, and it is dangerous getting on the roads with some of these other drivers. Getting on a scooter, or a motorcycle anywhere in Thailand, much less Phuket, Phangan, Dark Tao, or Samui without a very good helmet, or alot of riding experience, is like playing Russian Roulette with three or four bullets in the chamber. It is absolutely asking for problems. The degree of recklessness here is astounding. And many foreigners come here thinking "how much trouble could I get in on a little scooter, on a tropical island"? Well, the answer is alot. The amount of foreigners who are killed on the Southern islands is staggering. Most are not reported in the media. I had a friend who worked for Samui rescue for many years, and said the numbers were about 30-60 a month, on Samui, Phangan and Koh Tao. The official number is about 3 a month. Rider beware. Use as good a helmet as you can afford, and do not use these eggshells pieces of crap. They crack at the first impact, and what lies underneath them? Your skull, which is very delicate.

 

I have been riding bikes for 49 years. Without any serious accidents. A few minor ones over the years. Riding a bike here is very dangerous. If not the highest, one of the highest fatality rates in the world. And an accident here can be very costly, to your person. Just ask yourself- do I have enough problems already, without a broken skull, or smashed head, or face injury, or lost eye? I have three friends who have been in motorbike accidents on Samui. One still cannot walk, or talk or function on her own, from a motorbike accident, where she hit her head on the pavement going only 20 kph. The other one has lost alot of his mental capacity after hitting his head. He insisted for years he would never wear a helmet. Now, he seems 15 years older. The third one is a close friend, who was hit by a sidecar, and nearly lost his leg. 11 operations later and after spending many millions of baht, he can walk, but with a limp, and the leg has caused him constant problems, many years later. 

  • Popular Post

Just waiting for L Lou to wake up and contradict everything. 🙄

I hope she recovers. I see folks like her every day, pre medical crisis.

 

Most tourists to this place are clueless, and expats get as lazy and careless as the locals. Fabulous for insurance companies.

4 minutes ago, norfolkandchance said:

$63,000 raised. Will not post here but that's some injury.

She's being treated in the US now.  Health care in the US is very expensive.  If she didn't have health insurance in the US, her expenses will be many times that amount.  

A nurse not wearing a full face helmet?

 

I went into an underpass a second after a scooter crashed from the other side, he rode in the debris at the inside on the underpass lane, lost the front wheel at WOT and highsided, his pillion friend went mouth first onto the kerb. The look of horror as he got up with the bottom of his face gone, teeth, bone and the thickest red blood and liquid I've ever seen splurting out from where his mouth and jaw previously was will stay with me for a long time. Would have lost all his teeth, smashed and shattered jaw. Don't wear open face helmets if you value your face. 

3 hours ago, BritManToo said:

A full face helmet is essential if you want to keep your face!

Agreed, but if she was renting a bike most motorcycle rental places don't have full face helmets.

3 hours ago, webfact said:

image.jpeg

Picture courtesy of Boston 25 News

 

A heart-stopping vacation horror in Krabi, Thailand, as an American ICU nurse sees her holiday flip into a nightmare moped crash, leaving her with catastrophic facial injuries.

 

Sierra Fairhurst, a 24-year-old from Massachusetts, was cruising with friends when darkness engulfed her journey, resulting in shattered facial bones and lost teeth. Struggling in a local hospital with unsatisfactory conditions, the situation grew worse when her passport vanished, stalling vital medical transfers.

 

Despite the chaos, her mother, Zoe Rose, and brother rushed to her side, encountering hospital rooms with pigeons and inadequate facilities. "Physically, you can see that her nose is over to the side; physically, she doesn’t have any teeth; her chin was kind of removed, but it’s now back on, and her eyelid was gone, but that’s now on,"

 

Rose lamented about her daughter's condition. A GoFundMe page, aiming to ease the financial burden of medical expenses and recovery, has been established to help Sierra’s family during this challenging time.

 

 

 

Compounded by lost identification, transferring Sierra to a better hospital in Bangkok for further treatment seemed impossible, yet the US Embassy hustled a new passport to re-ignite her recovery journey.

 

Finally flown to Bangkok for urgent surgeries, Sierra returned safely to the US by March 27th. Boston Logan International Airport marked the start of her stateside healing journey, ushering in a series of appointments with specialists to address her severe injuries, with ongoing costs potentially reaching thousands of Thai Baht.

 

Her mother remains thankful that Sierra is alive to tell the tale. As Sierra soldiers through recovery, her spirit shines brighter, pressing on through physical scars with hopes of returning to her everyday life and the healthcare field.

 

This incident underscores the critical importance of careful travel planning and safety precautions on international adventures, highlighting the vital role of community support in times of crisis.

 

Based on a story by The Thaiger

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

-- 2025-04-03

 

image.png

 

image.jpeg

Again somebody ignored to have sufficient insurance, and then begging for other people's money. Pathetic

  • Popular Post
12 minutes ago, Tom89 said:

Agreed, but if she was renting a bike most motorcycle rental places don't have full face helmets.

Then don't rent the bike

  • Popular Post

 

2 hours ago, roo860 said:

Just waiting for L Lou to wake up and contradict everything. 🙄

Why are you so concerned about my posting on this thread, what do you see that you would like to be contradicted?   

 

Is there something wrong with fallacies and inaccuracies being commented on?   In the context of the OP, and the posts here, would you like to know that she was apparently on an "ATV", not a "moped"?

It said she was an ICU nurse so she should have insurance.  Additionally she had to understand the risks as she would have seen patients with injuries in residency and on the job.

 

I understand, you come to Thailand and want to have fun, ride around on a motorbike, and enjoy yourself.

 

You have to properly analyze the situation.  Take a motorbike taxi first. Do you have the skill and experience to ride safely.  Do you have medical insurance?

Did you fill out the Emergency info on your mobile phone?

 

Another young rider who still believes the risks outweigh the reward.

Riding between Yaso and Ubon several years back.  Got so sick I had to pull over and sit down.    Truck stopped and put my bike in back , then took us to Ubon.   Gave him 2500 THB.  
Test and blood work  at BKK hospital Ubon.    Results severe bone infection.   Serious antibiotics via pick line with possible amputation.    Said F that and booked first class EVA with seat bed to Seattle. 
 

Results were some really nasty antibiotics via pick line every 8 hours for 8 weeks and two knee replacements , the later xtends 15 cm into tibia and 17 cm into femur. Over three month period. 
 

total was $639,000 and some change.    Insurance negotiated reduction and I kicked in a out $20,000.      Western world medicine ridiculously expensive, but I have both my legs with 60% use of the metal knee, rather than just one.  And I can go still most the night.  

  • Popular Post

As soon as I read the headline, I knew there would be a GoFundMe page involved. :laugh:

26 minutes ago, J Branche said:

It said she was an ICU nurse so she should have insurance.  

She will have had insurance for the US.

 

May of may not cover emergencies abroad; often does not.

 

She may or may not have taken out special travel insurance. And if so, it  may or may not have covered moto accident. 

36 minutes ago, J Branche said:

It said she was an ICU nurse so she should have insurance.  Additionally she had to understand the risks as she would have seen patients with injuries in residency and on the job.

 

I understand, you come to Thailand and want to have fun, ride around on a motorbike, and enjoy yourself.

 

You have to properly analyze the situation.  Take a motorbike taxi first. Do you have the skill and experience to ride safely.  Do you have medical insurance?

Did you fill out the Emergency info on your mobile phone?

 

Another young rider who still believes the risks outweigh the reward.

 Average Icu nurse wagein the states is $85k+ per yr. Massachusetts 93k+.

More than likely she has free healthcare provided by her hospital employer in the states.

 

 

3 hours ago, Paul45 said:

Must have.  She was already flown back to the US.  Given her condition it seems like it must have been a special medical flight.

Why must have? She had GoFundMe.... and mother maybe paid.... and besides that if not having driving license a travel insurance will not pay anyway as she was driving illegal..

4 hours ago, webfact said:

image.jpeg

Picture courtesy of Boston 25 News

 

A heart-stopping vacation horror in Krabi, Thailand, as an American ICU nurse sees her holiday flip into a nightmare moped crash, leaving her with catastrophic facial injuries.

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

-- 2025-04-03

 

image.png

 

image.jpeg

 

37 minutes ago, Liverpool Lou said:

 

Is there something wrong with fallacies and inaccuracies being commented on?   In the context of the OP, and the posts here, would you like to know that she was apparently on an "ATV", not a "moped"?

 

I can only comment on information supplied.

5 hours ago, norfolkandchance said:

$63,000 raised. Will not post here but that's some injury.

Cost of family flying to, and staying in, Thailand

 

Special medivac flight  from Krabi to private hospital in Bkk

 

Several specialized surgeries at Bkk private hospital

 

And possibly some extra costs related to return flight.

 

Easily reach that amount or more. 

 

She also probably has a deductible (excess) on her US insurance as well. Most people do.  But the medevac flight and surgeries in Bkk would be the big ticket items. 

 

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