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Illinois Mom Recounts Recovery After E‑Scooter Crash That Left Her Clinically Dead

Surgeons rebuilt her face with grafted skin and plates following catastrophic craniofacial injuries.

Overview

  • In July 2024, Savanah White and her then‑seven‑year‑old son were hit by a car while crossing an intersection in Rockford, Illinois on an e‑scooter, sending them about 25 feet through the air.
  • White says the crash shattered 26 facial bones, exposed part of her brain, and led to a broken pelvis, a collapsed lung, two strokes, an aneurysm, and a period of clinical death lasting about 84 seconds.
  • She was initially too unstable for surgery, remained hospitalized for three weeks, and later underwent reconstructive operations including a forehead skin graft taken from a C‑section scar and insertion of facial plates.
  • Her son, now eight, was treated for a broken leg and required two head surgeries, with both mother and child described as physically recovered a year later.
  • White reports lasting effects including a forehead scar, post‑traumatic stress, and permanent loss of smell, and she avoids driving or crossing streets alone; Rockford Police were contacted for comment in recent coverage.