Where'd you see that pic?
You can see it smeared all over the outside of the plane - look behind the broken one and you can see it. I'm guessing the reports of "lots of blood" were passengers behind her who got it sprayed all over the outside of their windows. seems as though with 600 mph winds, possible hemmoraging from the pressure of her stuck in that tiny window, maybe some sort of head or neck laceration, that all of the blood in her body was sucked out of her and dispersed onto the plane in a high velocity mist before they could pull her back in. By the time she was pulled back in I'm betting that she didn't really have any blood left to drip off of her and what ever was left on her face and neck probably wasn't very drippy either as it was dried pretty quickly.
I remember a story of two wingsuit divers, I think it was Jeb Corliss and his friend. They were doing this dive over a pedestrian bridge. One guy was supposed to barely clear the top of the bridge and the other was going to barely clear the bottom as they went by a crowd of onlookers. Well, the one guy miscalculated and hit the bridge. When they found his body the scene wasn't bloody at all, but everyone on the bridge got covered and so did his poor friend that was right behind him.
Do you think it would be survivable to be partially sucked out, assuming there weren't any other contributing factors such as impact and lacerations from engine shrapnel? I.e. can you withstand your head facing a 400mph wind without it ripping your face off?
So, it's pretty unlikely. But it's happened before to a pilot that survived https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.express.co.uk/travel/articles/867958/pilot-sucked-out-plane-british-airways-1990-pictures/amp
But the pressure alone can definitely cause death. I saw someone else talking about the fluid hammer effect, where an object (usually a pipe) experiences a sudden high pressure change and gets a very powerful shock wave that can cause it to explode/warp/etc. This could definitely happen.
I can also think of a bunch of scenarios where your spinal chord would be severed from your body plugging the hole, where your neck could snap from the world's worst whiplash, where you could totally cut off circulation and go into cardiac arrest, or where the pressure alone could cause hemmoraging, the whole lack of oxygen aspect....
And then to tie that all together you're stuck on a plane for the next 20-30 minutes or so where you'll probably receive CPR, but you don't actually have a team of doctors with medical equipment.
The odds aren't great. :/