A doctor from a costician hospital shares new information on Miller Gardnermedical emergency and death.
Doctor Kevin GannonWho heads the emergency care hospital Quepos to Quepos, Costa Rica, says US Weekly That his team tried to resuscitate Miller after being called to his hotel on Friday, March 21.
While talking to We On Wednesday March 26, Gannon, who did not personally treat Miller, said that the hospital had sent a medical team to the Arenas del Mar Beachfront & Rainforest Resort, where Miller – The 14 -year -old son of the former New York Yankees star Brett Gardner – Stay with his family.
“We received the call from the hotel and answered immediately,” Gannon told We. “The urgency was for a patient who was a non -reactive man of 14 years. On the scene was an approved doctor, a nurse and a first driver of response from the ambulance. ”
When they arrived at the scene, they found “a 14 -year -old patient without a sign of information” with his “family members” also present. According to Gannon, the team “carried out an advanced life support RCR for 30 minutes” and the patient was “declared dead after 30 minutes”. They then “called the authorities”.
The results of the autopsy are pending. “We don’t know what caused it,” added Gannon.
Gannon would not discuss Miller’s clinical history or the possible death of death. He said that other family members had “gastrointestinal symptoms”.
Earlier Wednesday, an official of the Costa Rica Judicial Investigation Agency (OIJ) said Daily mail That the Gardners – Brett, 41, his wife, Jessica, their eldest son, Hunter and Miller – had suffered from “severe stomach cramps, vomiting and diarrhea” after eating in a neighboring restaurant on the evening of Thursday, March 20.
A doctor from the Arenas del Mar Beachfront & Rainforest Resort was called immediately and allegedly gave them all the drugs for their symptoms.
The next morning, Miller was found dead in his hotel room. Her Preliminary cause of death was initially classified as asphyxiation “after possible poisoning after apparently ingested food”.
Then, a police officer of the Costa Rica judicial investigation (OIJ) told CNN on Tuesday, March 25, that Miller probably died of “asphyxiation due to intoxication linked to food poisoning”.
However, an OIJ official said We Tuesday, asphyxiation had been entirely excluded as the cause after Miller’s waves were observed without obstruction.
The authorities are now examining if the medication given to Miller at night before his death might be to blame.
“We do toxicology tests to determine if this medication could have caused death,” said the head of the OIJ Daily mail.
The official also said they were investigating to find out if Miller “had brought an existing bacterial infection” with him when he went to Costa Rica from the family’s home in Summerville, in South Carolina.
Results of Miller autopsy and toxicology reports could take months due to an epidemic of gang violence At Costa Rica, according to the OIJ.
“We hike in homicides while these drug gangs are fighting for the territory and each of them needs an autopsy,” said the manager Daily mail.