The elderly woman was found amid the ruins of a two-story house five days after a 7.5 magnitude earthquake struck central Japan.
An elderly woman in her 90s has been rescued from under the rubble of a two-story house more than five days after a powerful earthquake struck Japan.
Rescuers found the woman in Suzu City in Ishikawa prefecture on Saturday evening – 124 hours after the quake struck – and took her to a nearby hospital, according to Japan’s public broadcaster NHK.
On Sunday, a doctor told reporters that the woman is well enough to have conversations, but her legs are injured.
Kume Takanori, a member of the emergency rescue team, told NHK that the woman’s knees had been stuck under furniture within a very narrow space between the first and second floor. It took hours to free her, Takanori said.
Old people are really built differently in Japan. When I was there I took the path to the top of the Inari Shrine mountain, there was a pretty steep part with lots of steps I had to stop mid way and nearly die on the side. I looked to the side and saw an old man skipping up the steps like it was nothing.
An elderly woman in her 90s has been rescued from under the rubble of a two-story house more than five days after a powerful earthquake struck Japan.
Rescuers found the woman in Suzu City in Ishikawa prefecture on Saturday evening – 124 hours after the quake struck – and took her to a nearby hospital, according to Japan’s public broadcaster NHK.
Kume Takanori, a member of the emergency rescue team, told NHK that the woman’s knees had been stuck under furniture within a very narrow space between the first and second floor.
The 7.5 magnitude earthquake that struck central Japan on January 1 triggered tsunami alerts as far away as eastern Russia.
Experts call this the “golden period” for finding survivors, as the conditions of people trapped and injured can deteriorate quickly afterward.
Addressing this in a statement shared on X, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said traffic restrictions would be implemented around the earthquake zone from Sunday.
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If she's not going to be on dialysis, I will be goddamn amazed. Muscle damage (Rhabdomyolysis, I love that word) and dehydration pretty much assures an acute kidney injury. It's actually a very common diagnosis for the elderly after being in one spot for a prolonged time after a fall.