Makenzie Wethington is in good condition, despite multiple injuries, including to her liver, pelvis lumbar spine in her lower back, shoulder blade and several ribs, trauma surgeon Jeffrey Bender said.
"I don't know the particulars of the accident, as I wasn't there. But if she truly fell 3,000 feet, I have no idea how she survived," the surgeon from Oklahoma said.
Makenzie is expected to leave the intensive care unit soon, he said.
The company involved has defended its decision, saying the father went up with his daughter and was the first to jump.
Robert Swainson, instructor and owner of the company involved, said Makenzie's parachute had opened as it should have done but she began to spiral downward when the chute went up but not out.
The instructor also said Makenzie had a radio hookup in her helmet through which someone gave her instructions.
"It was correctable, but corrective action didn't appear to have been taken," he said.
"The most I could have done is screamed," he said.
Nancy Koreen, director of sport promotion at the US Parachute Association, said its safety requirements allow someone who is 16 to make a dive with parental consent, though some places set the age higher.
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