A mom of four has died after falling on a treadmill during a routine visit to an LA Fitness gym in Kent, Washington.Delrie Rosario, 36, was working out with her sister, Marissa Woods — something she did nearly every day — when she fell on the treadmill last Friday and hit her head, according to a report fromKIRO-7 News.“She tried to slow the machine down. I thought maybe she just missed a step. She just collapsed, [and] hit her head on the machine,” Woods said.“I was screaming, you know, ‘Anybody, just please help! Anybody know how to do CPR?”FacebookNever miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Woods said that while people stopped their workouts to rush in and come to her sister’s aid, “not one worker” helped when she fell, Woods told KIRO-7 News.. “I think they were in shock.”LA Fitness declined PEOPLE’s request for comment.Rosario, who never regained consciousness after falling, later died at a local hospital.An organ donor, Rosario would go on to save five lives, according to her sister.Delrie Rosario never regained consciousness after hitting her head on the treadmill.Getty Images“Five people, literally like right now! [She’s] saving lives. How big can your heart be to still be saving lives?” said Woods. “Just think, somebody’s walking around…with her big heart. They don’t even know what heart they’re about to get.”Rosario worked two jobs to provide for her children, Delaino, Rickey, Ric’Kae and Delaiah.“[She was] a mother first. Always everything she did was for kids. She worked so hard for kids,” said Woods about her sister, who called herself “the momma” on her Facebook page..A GoFundMe has been set up for Delrie Rosario’s four children.GoFundMeHer coworkers set up aGoFundMeto help provide for her children, calling Rosario “an Angel walking amongst us here on earth.”Woods called her sister’s fall and death a “bizarre accident” — and while deaths from treadmills are rare, injuries aren’t.A 2019 Consumer Product Safety Commission,National Electronic Injury Surveillance System reportfound that more than 400,000 Americans are treated in an average year for injuries related to exercise equipment.And treadmills cause thehighest numberof exercise-related injuries in the home, contributing to almost 16,000 emergency room visits in 2020.“Anytime you go to a gym, make sure that you either have somebody else with you or you tell someone where you’re going,”trainer Harley Pasternak told PEOPLE. “This doesn’t only happen with treadmills but all forms of exercise – and often there’s no one around to help.”
A mom of four has died after falling on a treadmill during a routine visit to an LA Fitness gym in Kent, Washington.
Delrie Rosario, 36, was working out with her sister, Marissa Woods — something she did nearly every day — when she fell on the treadmill last Friday and hit her head, according to a report fromKIRO-7 News.
“She tried to slow the machine down. I thought maybe she just missed a step. She just collapsed, [and] hit her head on the machine,” Woods said.
“I was screaming, you know, ‘Anybody, just please help! Anybody know how to do CPR?”

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
Woods said that while people stopped their workouts to rush in and come to her sister’s aid, “not one worker” helped when she fell, Woods told KIRO-7 News.. “I think they were in shock.”
LA Fitness declined PEOPLE’s request for comment.
Rosario, who never regained consciousness after falling, later died at a local hospital.
An organ donor, Rosario would go on to save five lives, according to her sister.
Delrie Rosario never regained consciousness after hitting her head on the treadmill.Getty Images

Getty Images
“Five people, literally like right now! [She’s] saving lives. How big can your heart be to still be saving lives?” said Woods. “Just think, somebody’s walking around…with her big heart. They don’t even know what heart they’re about to get.”
Rosario worked two jobs to provide for her children, Delaino, Rickey, Ric’Kae and Delaiah.
“[She was] a mother first. Always everything she did was for kids. She worked so hard for kids,” said Woods about her sister, who called herself “the momma” on her Facebook page..
A GoFundMe has been set up for Delrie Rosario’s four children.GoFundMe

GoFundMe
Her coworkers set up aGoFundMeto help provide for her children, calling Rosario “an Angel walking amongst us here on earth.”
Woods called her sister’s fall and death a “bizarre accident” — and while deaths from treadmills are rare, injuries aren’t.
A 2019 Consumer Product Safety Commission,National Electronic Injury Surveillance System reportfound that more than 400,000 Americans are treated in an average year for injuries related to exercise equipment.
And treadmills cause thehighest numberof exercise-related injuries in the home, contributing to almost 16,000 emergency room visits in 2020.
“Anytime you go to a gym, make sure that you either have somebody else with you or you tell someone where you’re going,”trainer Harley Pasternak told PEOPLE. “This doesn’t only happen with treadmills but all forms of exercise – and often there’s no one around to help.”
source: people.com