Doctor at a hospital in Costa Rica shares a new look at Miller GardnerEmergency aid and death of medicine.
D -r Kevin Gannonwho runs Quepos Argent Care Hospital in Quepos, Costa Rica, says US Weekly That his team tried to resuscitate Miller after being summoned to his hotel on Friday, March 21.
While talking to USA On Wednesday, March 26th, Ganon, who personally did not treat Miller, said the hospital sent a medical team to Arenas del Mar Beachfront & Rainforest Resort, where the Miller-14-year-old son of New York Yankeys Brett Gardner – He stayed with his family.
“We received the call from the hotel and we immediately answered,” Gannon explained to USAS “The emergency situation was for a patient who was not reacted by a 14-year-old man. At the scene he was a licensed doctor, nurse and leader of the first ambulance.”
When they arrived on stage, they also found a “14-year-old patient with no vital” with his “family members”. According to Gannon, the team “carried out the CPR for advanced life support for 30 minutes” and the patient was “declared dead after 30 minutes”. Then they “called the authorities.”
The autopsy results are waiting. “We don’t know what caused this,” Gannon adds.
Ganon would not discuss the clinical history of Miller or the possible cause of death. He said other members of his family had “gastrointestinal symptoms”.
Earlier on Wednesday, an employee of the Costa Rica Judicial Investigation Agency (OIJ) to say Daily Mail That Gardners – Bret, 41, his wife Jessica, their bigger son, hunter and Miller – suffered from “severe stomach cramps, vomiting and diarrhea” after eating at a nearby restaurant on the evening of Thursday, March 20.
Doctor at the Arenas del Mar Beachfront & Rainforest resort is summoned immediately and supposedly They give them all the medicines for their symptoms.
The next morning, Miller was found dead in his hotel room. His preliminary cause of death It was originally classified as asphyxia “after possible intoxication after a clear ingestion of some food.”
A police officer at Costa Rica (OIJ) then told CNN on Tuesday, March 25, that Miller probably died of “suffocation due to intoxication associated with food poisoning.”
However, said an OIJ officer USA On Tuesday, asphyxia was completely excluded as the reason after Miller’s air waves were observed to be unobstructed.
Authorities are now investigating whether the medicines given to Miller the night before his death may be guilty.
“We are doing toxicological tests to determine whether this medicine could cause death,” the OiJ employee told Daily MailS
The employee also said they were investigating whether Miller “brought an existing bacterial infection” with him when he was traveling to Costa Rica from the family’s home at Summerville, South Carolina.
Results of Miller Autopsy and Toxicology may take months due to an epidemic of violence with a gang in Costa Rica, according to Oij.
“We have a hike in killings as these drug bands fight for territory and each of them needs autopsy,” the employee told Daily MailS