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Related: About this forumBorder Patrol wouldn't review the medical file of a girl with a heart condition before she died
An internal investigation finds that Border Patrol medical staff declined to review the file of an 8-year-old girl with a chronic heart condition and rare blood disorder before died on her ninth day in custody
By VALERIE GONZALEZ - Associated Press Jun 2, 2023 Updated 19 hrs ago
HARLINGEN, Texas (AP) Border Patrol medical staff declined to review the file of an 8-year-old girl with a chronic heart condition and rare blood disorder before she appeared to have a seizure and died on her ninth day in custody, an internal investigation found.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection has said the child's parents shared the medical history with authorities on May 10, a day after the family was taken into custody. But a nurse practitioner declined to review documents about the girl the day she died, CBP's Office of Professional Responsibility said in its initial statement Thursday on the May 17 death. The nurse practitioner reported denying three or four requests from the girls mother for an ambulance.
Anadith Tanay Reyes Alvarez, whose parents are Honduran, was born in Panama with congenital heart disease. She received surgery three years ago that her mother, Mabel Alvarez Benedicks, characterized as successful during a May 19 interview with The Associated Press.
A day before she died, Anadith showed a fever of 104.9 degrees Fahrenheit (40.5 degrees Celsius), the CBP report said.
A surveillance video system at the Harlingen, Texas, station was out of service since April 13, a violation of federal law that prevented evidence collection, according to the Office of Professional Responsibility, akin to a police departments office of internal affairs. The system was flagged for repair but wasn't fixed until May 23, six days after the girl died.
More:
https://scnow.com/ap/national/border-patrol-wouldnt-review-the-medical-file-of-a-girl-with-a-heart-condition-before/article_e37b7237-ee13-5130-9e8e-020c90fb783a.html
moniss
(5,738 posts)providers for things like prisons, jails and CBP etc. are notorious for refusing care in order to save money and increase their take. The nurse practitioner in this case should at the very least be looking at charges for this homicide but likely will at the most be dismissed and maybe have professional licensing issues if that. The nurse practitioner is likely to be the latest "hero" to the GQP and will be invited to speak at events.
I looked at the Dallas and Houston major newspapers and there is no story about this and we can be sure that Greg Abbott will not say anything. I would have thought that somewhere in Texas big city "journalism" there would be some reporter/editor/newsroom with enough of a semblance of a soul to at least force a "no comment" from the governor. Apparently I was wrong.
Judi Lynn
(162,385 posts)Chainfire
(17,757 posts)"She was an illegal, so she got what was coming." After all, she was an 8 year old, not a fetus. Heads should roll over the girl's death.