REDWOOD VALLEY, Calif. (AP) — A teenage girl died in a hospital three weeks after she was severely burned in a fire that tore through Mendocino County, California, raising the number of those killed in the state’s wildfires this month
REDWOOD VALLEY, Calif. (AP) — A teenage girl died in a hospital three weeks after she was severely burned in a fire that tore through Mendocino County, California, raising the number of those killed in the state’s wildfires this month to 43.
Kressa Shepherd, 17, died Sunday night at a Sacramento hospital, her aunt, Mindi Ramos, said Monday.
Doctors at Shriners Hospital for Children noticed Kressa did not register pain during a change of the dressing on her burns, Ramos said. After performing a CAT scan, they determined she was brain-dead, the aunt said.
“They kept her alive so we could say goodbye and eventually stopped the machines that were assisting her,” Ramos said.
A neighbor found Kressa, who was a junior at Ukiah High School, and her mother lying on the ground outside their home in a rural neighborhood in Redwood Valley. Both had more than half their bodies burned.
Kressa’s brother, 14-year-old Kai Shepherd, was found dead. He among the youngest who died in the wildfires.
First responders found their father, Jon Shepherd, separately, on the mountain. He was also badly burned but alive.
The Shepherds apparently tried to outrun the flames as the home their father built burned down.
Sara, 40, and Jon Shepherd, 44, remain hospitalized and have gone through several grafting surgeries.
Sara had burns in over 60 percent of her body and is at UC Davis Medical Center, in Sacramento. Jon was burned over 45 percent of his body and is hospitalized in stable condition at St. Francis Memorial Hospital’s burn unit in San Francisco, Ramos said.
Her sister and brother-in-law are conscious but only talk in whispers, she said. They have not asked questions about what happened, Ramos said.
“We don’t know how much they remember from that day. But we were advised to not give them the tragic news about their children unless they ask,” Ramos said.
She said her family is staying strong for her sister.
“Her entire life has been devastated, and we’re just taking it one breath at a time, one minute at a time,” Ramos said.
The wildfires that started the night of Oct. 8 and swept across a wide area north of San Francisco are the deadliest and most destructive the state has ever seen. While much of the devastation is in Sonoma and Napa counties, the heart of California’s wine country, fire also wiped out a swath of Redwood Valley, a community of about 1,800 roughly 70 miles (113 kilometers) north in Mendocino County.
Firefighters expect to fully contain the fatal fires that destroyed nearly 9,000 homes and businesses this week.