Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Boy survives 25,000 volt shock

A teenager is recovering in hospital after a 25,000-volt electric shock which threw him 25ft (7.6m) onto a railway line in Wigan. Sam Cunningham, 16, was wearing steel toecaps when he tried to retrieve a rugby ball from a bridge and a charge leapt from overhead power lines.

He fell onto the track below and was knocked unconscious but did not get electrocuted. He suffered severe burns and is expected to make a full recovery. His friends called emergency services, who alerted the rail networks to stop trains on the main line between Manchester and Wigan.



When Sam, who suffered burns to his legs, arm, back and face, came round, he managed to call his mother Ann. The mother-of-four immediately went to the track, at Platt Bridge.

Ms Cunningham, 40, a health care assistant, said: "I got there within a couple of minutes and all his clothes had been burned off, he was shaking from head to toe and the line was still live. All his hair had been singed and smoke was coming from the bandages paramedics had put on his legs. My head was just in bits and I can't believe that he is still alive - I don't think anybody can."



Sam, a labourer, is being treated in the specialist burns unit at Whiston Hospital, Merseyside. He will require skin grafts but is expected to make a full recovery and be back home next week.

A British Transport Police spokesman said he was "very lucky to be alive".

Second photo from here.

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