BU student in coma after deadly New Zealand crash
Topics: From the Wires, News
This combination of undated student identification photos provided by Boston University shows Austin Brashears, of Huntington Beach, Calif., left; Roch Jauberty, of Paris, France, center; and Daniela Lekhno, of Manalapan, N.J., right. The three students were killed in a minivan crash near the town of Taupo, New Zealand, Saturday, May 12, 2012. They had been enrolled in a BU study abroad program in Auckland, New Zealand. (AP Photo/Boston University)(Credit: AP)BOSTON (AP) — While studying abroad in Australia, Boston University junior Meg Theriault made sure to send flowers to her mother in Massachusetts before Mother’s Day.
The bouquet arrived two days ahead of Sunday’s holiday, with a note from the 21-year-old saying she would celebrate with her mom, Deb, when she arrived back in the United States this week.
Instead, Theriault’s aunt Terri Killam said Monday that her niece’s parents now are by the student’s side in a New Zealand hospital.
The college junior is in a medically induced coma following brain surgery Saturday in the wake of a minivan crash that killed three of her Boston University classmates and injured four others.
Theriault had been studying in Sydney since January, but had gone to New Zealand for the weekend to hike across a well-known volcanic crater with other BU students.
Killam said besides brain surgery, her niece also underwent an operation to fix her broken right arm. While the student’s condition had somewhat stabilized, Killam said Waikato Hospital officials still were listing her niece in critical condition.
“When Meg wakes up, we’ll see what else we have to do to get her home,” said Killam, of Danvers, Mass. “… We’ve got hope because she’s still with us.”
The woman said her niece was tossed out the window in the crash, which interrupted what she called the trip of a lifetime for a loved one who’d sent home a video clip of herself bungee jumping.
Another student was driving the van when it crashed, and a Boston University spokesman said administrators will caution students against driving while studying abroad in the wake of the deadly wreck.
School spokesman Colin Riley said Monday that officials discourage students from driving while studying internationally, but that it isn’t against policy. He said administrators review study abroad programs constantly, and don’t anticipate changes after what he said was a terrible tragedy Saturday.
Four other students, including the van’s driver, received moderate injuries in the crash. The driver and a second student were released from local hospitals Saturday while a third student was released Monday afternoon. A fourth student, a 20-year-old female, remained at Rotorua Hospital Tuesday in a stable condition, according to health officials.
All the students except for the two who remain in hospitals have returned to Auckland, officials said.




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