Clara Lewis works on rehabilitation with physical therapist Laura Jones at TOSH in Murray Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012. Clara Lewis was severely injured in mid-November when her vehicle was struck by a FrontRunner train in Kaysville.
Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
CENTERVILLE — Clara Lewis said it's a miracle she and her daughters are alive after their vehicle was hit by a commuter train in Kaysville last fall.
"That was what I was most worried about, was that the kids were OK and I didn't hurt anybody," Lewis said. "I didn't know what had happened at all."
She was driving to pick up her son at a friend's house in Kaysville on Nov. 14, but she never made it across the train tracks. The high-speed FrontRunner train hit the driver's side of the minivan near the front wheel. The impact left her seriously injured, but it was inches from an impact that could have killed the mother of three, family members said.
"First responders arrived on the scene, (then) they paralyzed me enough so that they could intubate me so I wouldn't suffer anymore brain damage or brain trauma," Lewis said.
She was rushed to McKay-Dee Hospital Center in Ogden with a fractured skull, a broken collarbone and shoulder blade, and two broken ribs. She spent much of her time in the intensive care unit in a medically-induced coma.
Her daughters, Emma and Michaela, were also in the van when the train hit. Both girls were released from the hospital after only a few hours.
While Lewis doesn't remember what happened, her husband, Evan Lewis, remembers where he was when he got the news.
"I tried to call Clara but no answer. I called again, no answer. (I) started trying to do Christmas lights, and I was actually up on the roof when I saw the first police officer pull into the circle," Evan Lewis said.
His wife remained in a coma for 3½ weeks.
"It was a miracle that I'm here and that I'm able to walk," Lewis said. "They didn't think I was going to have function of my whole left side."
Lewis is going through physical therapy and is making such good progress she's needed less than 10 appointments. Doctors said her brain is unlocking and her strength will return. The high-level balance exercises help her deal with constant dizziness.
"She's got one of the best attitudes I've ever met of anybody. She does anything and everything," said Laura Jones, Lewis' physical therapist at Intermountain Medical Center. Lewis played a year of basketball at Utah State University and participates in triathlons, disciplines that Jones said will help in her recovery.
She also does occupational therapy and speech therapy in her recovery effort.
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