If is telling you it is trying to fix the drive, that is your answer. The BIOS is doing its job. Can the drive be fixed -- maybe.
But, it will have to be removed and fixed on another system. You may however be able to fix it booting up on a Linux USB.
The first thing you need to do is to copy off all your stuff if you can get access to it. If the system won't recognize it or see anything on it, then there isn't many options to recover your things.
A full format may fix the problem. Then you will have to reinstall the OS and all your programs. However, I wouldn't advise trusting that it won't fail again in the near future.
The easiest thing is to just replace it and start over. If it is an HDD, it would be a good time to upgrade to an SSD.
crwdns2934105:0crwdne2934105:0
crwdns2934113:0crwdne2934113:0
crwdns2915270:0crwdne2915270:0
crwdns2889612:0crwdne2889612:0
0