She sat up on the stretcher and flailed around and is now dead.
This isn’t a conspiracy post.
I wonder what made her sit up. Was she conscious or a nerve reaction?
Did she go into shock after?
This isn’t a conspiracy post.
I wonder what made her sit up. Was she conscious or a nerve reaction?
Did she go into shock after?
My guess is that after she got in the ambulance, there was a medical emergency we haven't been told about (and BTW we have no legal right to know about her medical emergencies and the family has no reason to tell us a thing). There's good odds that her lungs were so badly damaged by the heat and toxic fumes that there was a "Code Blue", that is, her heart stopped and CPR and emergency procedures were done, but when the heart started beating again it was too late. There had been too much time when no oxygen got to her brain, and when the emergency was over her brain had been irreparably damaged.
I did a paper on burns when I was in college and they aren't superficial injuries, a large burn will mess up your vital organs in addition to the area directly affected, and that's nothing compared to the damage that the heat and smoke would have done to her lungs. If the lungs are lost then that's that, the body can't survive without working lungs and modern medicine doesn't have a substitute.
Well, it actually sort of does, there's a thing called an ECMO machine ("extracorporeal membrane oxygenation), which will put oxygen into the bloodstream and take carbon dioxide out, but those things are only used for people whose other organs are working, and who had a chance of survival. Heche never had that much of a chance.
Fair points interesting read.
shareYes, because in case of a "Code Blue" (you watch too many movies, lol) paramedics would absolutely not do any CPR to ensure there is continued oxygen supply and would just watch her go anoxic..............
Try again.
FYI the Code Blue process always involves doing whatever is possible to get oxygen into the patient', if a person Codes in a hospital or an ambulance staffed by paramedics then they will be put on a ventilator to get as much oxygen in and as much CO2 out as possible, and keep doing CPR to circulate the oxygen through the body.
However, if a person's lungs are horribly damaged, by disease or smoke inhalation or toxins, none of that will do a damn bit of good. If the lungs are too damaged to pass oxygen and CO2 back and forth, absolutely nothing can be done to save the patient whose lungs are shot. That can happen, after an extended spell of CPR and trying to oxygenate the patient by any means necessary, the heart will start beating again... after the brain has been irreparably damaged b a lack of oxygen.
I think your body is still in shock and on drugs....the injuries really start to resonate hours later when your brian swells and other stuff.
I would have never thought she would have died after seeing her sit up like that.
And I thought I read she was talking with the rescue team
I had a friend long ago who was involved in an accident while waiting for the bus he took to and from work.
Apparently a car hit a telephone pole and the pole fell and struck him.
I recall being told that he had been in a coma, then woke up and wanted to get out of the hospital, but it was too soon for that and then he slipped back into the coma and passed away.
Fair points, and sorry for your loss.
shareEven on some crime show I was watching the other day they had the scenario of someone in the hospital seemingly improving then suddenly having an ultimately fatal crisis, so I'm sure it happens occasionally, sad to say.
I'm resisting going on about how much a Saint this guy was -- but he really was.
I will share his name only because, oddly enough, his name was Tom Smith.
And good lord, this was around 35 years ago. "Sigh"
they had the scenario of someone in the hospital seemingly improving then suddenly having an ultimately fatal crisis
Qanon latest obsession?
shareSeems pretty pleasant.
share