Shocking new footage has emerged of the moment a Qantas worker fell six metres through a gap in a damaged aerobridge, leaving her fighting for life. 

Customer experience supervisor Olivia Hristovska, 51, suffered critical injuries when she hit the tarmac on May 3, with video showing she appeared to be looking through viewing windows in the wall of the aerobridge when she stepped into the floor gap.

She suffered life-threatening head injuries, a fractured spine, broken clavicle, collapsed lung, and had been placed in an induced coma by doctors.

Ms Hristovska’s daughters Monique and Sienna have revealed this week they found out about their mother’s accident via doctors and the media, claiming that Qantas did not inform them of the incident.

Monique also revealed her mother has now been disharged from hospital a month on from the fall but is still suffering significant effects.

‘Bones can heal, but the brain… you don’t know. She’s lost her identity,’ she told Nine News.

Monique, 27, previously told Daily Mail Australia she hadn’t left her mother’s side since the accident, and revealed its devastating consequences.

‘We feel it’s important the full human impact of this incident is understood – not just the event itself, but the long-term effects on her body, mind, and our family,’ she said. 

Monique last weekend celebrated Mother’s Day by her mum’s bedside in hospital as Olivia lay unconscious next to her.

‘This year, I hold my own mum close – not just in heart, but in gratitude,’ she later posted on Instagram. 

‘After everything, she’s here, and that alone is a miracle I don’t take lightly. To every mother, nurturer, and divine woman holding it all – we see you.’

Qantas customer service employee Olivia Hristovska (pictured) was put into an induced coma after falling about five metres from an aerobridge at Sydney Airport on Saturday May 3

Qantas customer service employee Olivia Hristovska (pictured) was put into an induced coma after falling about five metres from an aerobridge at Sydney Airport on Saturday May 3

The moment Ms Hristovska fell She appears to be looking out gaps in the wall

Footage shows the moment Ms Hristovska fell as she appeared to be looking out of gaps in the wall rather than looking at the floor beneath her

Safework NSW is investigating the circumstances surrounding the incident, while Qantas said their focus was on supporting Ms Hristovska

Safework NSW is investigating the circumstances surrounding the incident, while Qantas said their focus was on supporting Ms Hristovska

Monique also shared a throwback video of her mum unwrapping a gift of lingerie from her daughter’s business, Monsera Intimates, on a previous Mother’s Day.

‘You are the queen of attention to detail, I got it from you,’ Monique told her in the video as her mum, wearing her Qantas uniform, beamed with pride.

‘This day is for you – the woman behind it all. The goddess. The life-giver. The space-holder,’ she posted. 

‘Love hard. Speak it freely. Honour the women in your life while they’re here – and carry their legacy when they’re not.

‘Love you mumma.’ 

Friends wished the ‘strong’ and ‘gorgeous’ Ms Hristovska a speedy recovery.

‘Love this. Your mum is in my thoughts, and I’m hoping for a swift and full recovery for her,’ one wrote. 

‘Olivia, you are a strong woman praying and thinking of you as you move through your recovery,’ another said.

Paramedics attend to Ms Hristovska after the accident

Paramedics attend to Ms Hristovska after the accident 

Her daughter Monique Hristovska, 27, (pictured) told Daily Mail Australia she hasn't left her mother's side since the accident

Her daughter Monique Hristovska, 27, (pictured) told Daily Mail Australia she hasn’t left her mother’s side since the accident

A Qantas employee said staff working at the airport at the time of the tragedy had been 'traumatised' by it (another aerobridge connected to a Qantas aircraft is pictured)

A Qantas employee said staff working at the airport at the time of the tragedy had been ‘traumatised’ by it (another aerobridge connected to a Qantas aircraft is pictured)

Ms Hristovska is believed to have fallen through an opening where the shutter wall of the aerobridge came loose from its tracks. 

One family friend posted on social media that a male colleague had desperately tried to stop her fall. 

‘She was leaning on the side of the aerobridge, and it buckled out, separating from the floor,’ she posted. 

‘A male colleague tried to grab her to no avail. She was unresponsive for 15 minutes, but was revived in the ambulance and then put in an induced coma. 

‘She has head injuries, and most likely broken bones.’

Ms Hristovska was rushed to Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney’s inner west in a critical condition and placed into an induced coma. 

‘She has bleeding on the brain and a broken collarbone, broken ribs, and probably a broken pelvis,’ the friend added in a later update.

‘She fell sideways, then backwards, and hit her head. She is not breathing on her own yet. What an absolute tragedy.’

Monique Hristovska has paid a heartfelt tribute to her mother Olivia (pictured far left with other Qantas employees) whose survival she described as a 'miracle'

Monique Hristovska has paid a heartfelt tribute to her mother Olivia (pictured far left with other Qantas employees) whose survival she described as a ‘miracle’

Images of the opening in the aerobridge Ms Hristovska is believed to have fallen through have sparked questions about how the safety risk went unnoticed (pictured)

Images of the opening in the aerobridge Ms Hristovska is believed to have fallen through have sparked questions about how the safety risk went unnoticed (pictured) 

Sydney Airport (pictured) say its aerobridges were frequently inspected and serviced under a 'scheduled systematic preventative maintenance program'

Sydney Airport (pictured) say its aerobridges were frequently inspected and serviced under a ‘scheduled systematic preventative maintenance program’

Ms Hristovska has worked for the airline for 14 years, according to her LinkedIn profile.

A fellow Qantas employee posted on social media that staff working at the airport at the time of the tragedy had been ‘traumatised’ by it.

Images of the opening in the aerobridge Ms Hristovska is believed to have fallen through have sparked questions about how the safety risk went unnoticed. 

Sydney Airport told Daily Mail Australia its aerobridges were frequently inspected and serviced under a ‘scheduled systematic preventative maintenance program’. 

Safework NSW has confirmed investigations into circumstances surrounding the tragic incident are ‘ongoing’. 

Sydney Airport and Qantas told Daily Mail Australia they are assisting the workplace health and safety regulator in its investigations. 

The airline said its focus was on supporting Ms Hristovska.

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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk