Child Falls Off 3rd Floor Balcony at AKL

What a horrible experience for that family. Hopefully she is doing as well as the article suggests.

As a parent of a 7 year old, I know that those resort balconies are scary for all parents of small children. It just underscores the importance of vigilance in monitoring the children when in a new surrounding. Kids that age believe that they can fly. Thank goodness they were not at BLT or one of the resorts with cement below the balcony.

Our prayers go out to that family.
 
Poor family...
I can't imagine... :worried:
 
Wow.

Apparently the medics on the scene immediately "trauma alerted" her to Orlando Regional. ORMC is a Level One Trauma Center and Arnold Palmer seems to be the pediatric component of that trauma center, so she should have received excellent care.

Our thoughts and prayers are with the little girl and her family.
 

Glad to hear she's in stable condition! Hope the rest of her recovery goes well too!
 
OMG a parent's worse nightmare. I always make sure that I am out there with my grandson when we stay there. We were there a couple of weeks ago.

Last year we stayed at BLT and we were on the 12th floor. He was 5 and he decided to stand on the table. I almost lost it. I had a stern sit down with him. Kids are so curious.

I am glad she is recovering.
 
If the parents were clever, they would blame the bees...

But in seriousness, this is why I have a , no parent, no balcony time policy.
 
Yea this would be why the sliding glass doors have those nifty locks on them
 
That is so scary! Glad the little girl sounds like she will be ok. Balconies can be scary!
 
I pray for a speedy recovery.
I am a lunatic when it comes to the balcony....
My DD is 11 and I don't like her on the balcony by herself....I'm an absolute crazy woman on a cruise....no mom...no balcony!!!
I always lock top lock
Kerri
 
We were told that she broke her jaw and nothing else. My family was split between Jambo and Kidani this weekend - though we were all in my room at Kidani when this happened and we did not see it.
 
Wow, how horrible. I hope she didn't really break her jaw. But it sounds she will really get excellent care at the hospital she was flown to.

That family is in my thoughts forever.
 
Has anyone heard any update? I did a Google search yesterday and checked the Orlando Sentinel today, but haven't found much.

I did find one (and only one) news story yesterday that said she'd been released from the hospital. However, it seems unlikely that they would not at least keep her overnight for observation. We usually consider a fall from 2X the patient's height potentially very serious and this poor girl fell from probably 10X her height. Just from the potential, I would expect them to keep her at least 24 hours.
 
She fell Monday evening so if the only damage was to her jaw (which is remarkable and lucky) then it's not that surprising that she would have been released by end of day Tuesday or Wednesday. At her age the jaw is still malleable so hopefully she will have a full recovery.

And with this incident in mind the rest of us will watch our kids like hawks if they get too close to the tables on the balcony ;)
 
She fell Monday evening so if the only damage was to her jaw (which is remarkable and lucky) then it's not that surprising that she would have been released by end of day Tuesday or Wednesday. At her age the jaw is still malleable so hopefully she will have a full recovery.
From an EMS perspective, the issue is not the fracture itself, but the forces required to cause the fracture and the damage those forces might cause when applied to other parts of the body...especially internal organs. Also, if she took a blow to the head strong enough to fracture her jaw, you have to suspect neck or spine injury. The obvious stuff is not usually the greatest threat to the patient; it's the stuff you can't see.

Also, we only have only one unofficial report that she fractured her jaw, nothing else. First of all, anyone who had actual knowledge of her injuries would not talk about them because of legal and ethical considerations. And secondly, the idea of a fractured jaw and nothing else makes no sense medically.

If the girl fell from 30-35 feet, and didn't encounter anything during the fall that would slow her momentum, you have to suspect serious internal injury. That suspicion, I'm sure, is why the medics airlifted her to a trauma center despite the fact that she was reportedly alert and responsive after the fall.

In cases like this, the media's general rule is: "If it bleeds, it leads." And that's especially true if something bad happens at Disney. The fact that we have not had any follow-up stories gives me hope that the girl will be okay. If she were in bad shape, we would have heard about it.
 
It was confirmed by the press that she was released from the hospital, which I presume would not have happened in the event of spinal or internal injuries. I'm glad though that they took her as quickly as possible to a good hospital.
 
It was confirmed by the press that she was released from the hospital, which I presume would not have happened in the event of spinal or internal injuries. I'm glad though that they took her as quickly as possible to a good hospital.
Thanks for the update. I did another Google search today and was unable to find anything more than the original article.

And yes, release from the hospital would definitely indicate that she suffered no very serious injuries.

Thanks again.
 
I was there after it happened (not knowing it was a child who'd fallen - we thought maybe some idiot adult was drunk or something). The only thing mentioned was a laceration over the eye, on the forehead. The cops & Disney people were still on the savannah discussing it when we were outside watching the giraffe watch the people on the ground ;-)
 





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