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Death by Telehealth
The Free Press ^ | 07.14.26 | Tanya Lukyanova

Posted on 07/16/2026 8:51:04 PM PDT by Bobbyvotes

Shortly after 5 a.m. on August 15, 2024, William Hylton stood at the foot of his son’s hospital bed, gently stroking his leg.

Around him, the intensive care unit at Bridgeport Hospital Milford Campus had erupted into chaos. Nurses and doctors pumped on 26-year-old Conor Hylton’s chest, shouting instructions and working frantically to resuscitate him. A breathing tube protruded from his mouth. Dark, lumpy, blood-clotted vomit stained the sheets and pooled on the floor.

“It’s just a very chaotic scene, as you can imagine,” William recalled. “You just want your child to survive. You start trying to make deals with God.”

Across the hallway, William’s wife, Betsy, sat hunched over a trash can, sick with fear.

Then, at 6:11 a.m., a doctor’s voice cut through the commotion.

“Is his family there?”

The voice came from a large monitor mounted on the wall. There, on-screen, was the physician directing the resuscitation efforts. He was 12 miles away, working from Yale New Haven Health’s headquarters in the tele-ICU hub.

(Excerpt) Read more at thefp.com ...


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: icu; telehealth
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The ICU situation reminded me of my visit to an ICU. At age 72, I was playing a long and hilly golf course with my young son-in-law. It was hot day in Seattle, and we were walking the course. The course was busy with a cart riders behind us and ahead of us. We had to walk fast to avoid players behind us slowed down. We finished the 18 holes, and stopped at the golf course café for hydration. By the time they served us pop and water, my dehydration took hold and I passed out. My Son-in-law broke my fall and gently let me drop on the floor. I remember coming around quickly on the floor. The golf course was required to call 911 and I was quickly whisked to a nearby hospital by ambulance.

The ambulance drops me off at the ICU but all beds were occupied, so I was left on a stretcher in the hallway. First thing the hospital staff asked me was my insurance card. Then the nurse came and checked my vitals. My heart was racing and my blood pressure was low. I was extremely thirsty and asked for a glass of water. Nurse told me I can't have anything until the doctor sees me. Several minutes passed and still no doctor showed up in the hallway where I lay on the stretcher. My son-in-law had followed the ambulance and was with me but he had no water bottle. He called my wife on phone and asked her to come to the ICU with water. All this time I am still horribly dehydrated and dying for any liquid to soothe my dry throat. Luckily my wife was a good driver and made it quickly to the hospital with water.

All this time there is still no room available in ICU so I am still lying on the stretcher in a hallway. But as soon as drank a bottle of water I felt much better, and I told my wife we can just leave, I am feeling almost normal.

Few days later I get hospital bill for use of ICU. Now that got me real mad. I wrote back to the hospital how they almost killed me by denying a simple drink of water. This was horrible negligent behavior after I had explained to the nurse why I was dehydrated. I told the hospital to get ready for a lawsuit for endangering my life.

The hospital wrote back, saying they were going to review and change the procedures in the ICU for cases like mine and that I owed no money for the ICU visit.

I can not believe a nurse is not allowed to deal with a dehydrated patient and give him water without the almighty doctor okaying it.

1 posted on 07/16/2026 8:51:04 PM PDT by Bobbyvotes
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To: Bobbyvotes

Even at our pig outfit hospital, triage will attend to you immediately for anything life threatening.


2 posted on 07/16/2026 8:56:59 PM PDT by Flaming Conservative ((Pray without ceasing))
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To: Flaming Conservative

They can attend to you only when a doctor is available. That was my whole point. I had no existing health issues, had no pain, was not displaying any symptoms which would require surgery. It was a plain and simple case of walking 18 holes without time to drink water. A nurse should use commonsense and furnish water to an obviously dehydrated patient even if a doctor is not available.


3 posted on 07/16/2026 9:03:46 PM PDT by Bobbyvotes (Work is best form of worship to Gods.. per Bhagavad at ratio Geeta, the Hindu sacred book. )
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To: Bobbyvotes

If there is ever a place that you never hope to find your self, its the ICU of most American hospitals. High mortality rates and often cookbook medicine rendered by people you do not know.


4 posted on 07/16/2026 9:11:43 PM PDT by allendale
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To: Bobbyvotes

I can say I, too, was dehydrated and did not know it. My systolic blood pressure went above 250 and couldn’t continue to read the diastolic from the error.

Thankfully, my wife was able to get me to an urgent care that was upgradable to an ER and after a couple hours there, I was okay to head home.

Those urgent care/ ER clinics will get you in, right away. I can say I had to wait at several hospitals with family or friends for issues that they each had to stay 1-3 night over, and had to wait several hours to be seen.

I was told by one staffer the incredibly long wait was from people with no insurance, and, when you saw the packed waiting room, you knew 75% were illegals.


5 posted on 07/16/2026 9:14:28 PM PDT by ConservativeMind (Trump: Befuddling Democrats, Republicans, and the Media for the benefit of the US and all mankind.)
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To: Bobbyvotes

Diagnosis via telehealth is just a huge accident waiting to happen.
There are certain things you just can determine over a computer screen.


6 posted on 07/16/2026 9:14:48 PM PDT by doc maverick
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To: Bobbyvotes

As a retired RN, I can tell you that giving a patient anything to eat or drink before being diagnosed is an absolute no-no. However, in a case such as yours, you were capable of having your family give you a drink of water. Of course, if your wife had asked permission, it probably have not been given. There are any number of diagnoses you could have had, based on your symptoms. The best advice I can give anyone is, if at all possible, always have the most medically knowledgeable person you can with you if you have to go to the hospital.


7 posted on 07/16/2026 9:14:48 PM PDT by Flaming Conservative ((Pray without ceasing))
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To: Bobbyvotes

I, too have spent hours on a gurney in the ER hallway (twice).
Triage is a real thing.
As I lay there I saw patients in much worse shape than me
being taken care of (giving birth, heart attack, bleeding).
If your condition is not determined to be life threatening,
they will get to you when they get to you.


8 posted on 07/16/2026 9:45:11 PM PDT by Repeal The 17th ( I am obsessed with not being obsessed with anything.)
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To: Flaming Conservative

I grew up in India and was very lucky to have a mother with common sense. Contagious diseases were common during my years in India and I had my share of sicknesses. My mother was my doctor. She would get the medicines I needed from pharmacy and got me well quickly. In those days in India
people could by any medicines without prescription from a doctor. My mother is the reason I did not die from smallpox. She knew how to heal me from a severe smallpox attack. My entire 8 year body was covered with dime size blusters and very high fevers.

In my encounter with the ICU, neither the golf course or the nurse nor the ambulance personnel were allowed to use common sense and give a glass of water to a 72 year golfer who explained he had not drank any water playing 18 holes in 90 degree weather. Unbelievable control by the medical profession. I am staying healthy at age 86 by using my common sense and ignoring the doctors.


9 posted on 07/16/2026 9:53:22 PM PDT by Bobbyvotes (Work is best form of worship to Gods.. per Bhagavad at ratio Geeta, the Hindu sacred book. )
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To: allendale

Amen to that. Bureaucracy in hospitals is as bad as the government.


10 posted on 07/16/2026 9:59:20 PM PDT by Bobbyvotes (Work is best form of worship to Gods.. per Bhagavad at ratio Geeta, the Hindu sacred book. )
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To: ConservativeMind

Dehydration is sneaky as you said. Especially as we get older, hydration becomes more important.


11 posted on 07/16/2026 10:24:08 PM PDT by Bobbyvotes (Work is best form of worship to Gods.. per Bhagavad at ratio Geeta, the Hindu sacred book. )
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To: doc maverick

For routine care of common ailments all you really need is telehealth to get a prescription. For $29 I got a prescription for gout meds via Amazon. I hadn’t had an attack for years but a week long family reunion and a simple sprain caused a flare up. An urgent care walk in clinic would have cost $300.


12 posted on 07/16/2026 10:55:27 PM PDT by Organic Panic
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To: allendale
the ICU of most American hospitals

It's a g** d*** nightmare.

13 posted on 07/16/2026 11:15:29 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (The issue is never the issue. The issue is always the revolution.)
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To: ConservativeMind
Not just illegals, but also local knife and gun aficionados and their sometimes innocent victims infest ERs. Almost twenty five years ago, my then seventy year old mother was suffering from stroke symptoms in the early AM on a Saturday night.

After nearly an hour of waiting in the local big public hospital ER and against my mother's urging, I went to the intake nurse and politely threatened the hospital based on my family being thick with lawyers and even a judge. Soon after, a young doctor showed up to explain, with an attitude, that they mostly took patients in order of entry, but that gunshot victims got priority, as they surely should.

I countered with the point that my mother could suffer permanent stroke damage from additional delay. Meanwhile, the black teen in cuffs with a cop for company and a minor flesh wound from a gunshot who arrived after but went ahead of my mother for examination and treatment would have been just fine. How would that look for a jury? After a brief pause, the young doctor mumbled that my mother would be next.

A few minutes later, my mother was attended to by two nurses and a doctor. She was given a shot and a scan and admitted to an ICU room for further treatment and observation. A few days later, she was released after her stroke symptoms abated. My mother turns 95 in August and continues to be active and in full possession of her faculties -- and no stroke impairments.

The lesson is that when big hospital ERs are crowded, the obvious and (mostly) easy to assess trauma cases get processed first through the ER, usually into surgery. The often harder to evaluate internal medicine cases can easily get neglected, whether it is dehydration or a TIA or something else.

14 posted on 07/17/2026 2:35:13 AM PDT by Rockingham
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To: Bobbyvotes

You weren’t in the ICU. you were in the Emergency Room. Or ER.


15 posted on 07/17/2026 3:29:33 AM PDT by Chickensoup
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To: ConservativeMind

By removing tbe illegals our emergency rooms should clear to decent waiting times


16 posted on 07/17/2026 3:32:27 AM PDT by Chickensoup
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To: Bobbyvotes

EMT’s administer IV fluids without a doctor.


17 posted on 07/17/2026 5:13:15 AM PDT by steve8714 (I have great hope for Pope Leo. Oops. Not now.)
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To: Bobbyvotes

“It was a plain and simple case of walking 18 holes without time to drink water.”

without time?
18 holes?

You chose to abandon common sense, have a completely avoidable and preventable incident, then blame the health care system?

That, my friends, is why Health Care is expensive, Doctors do endless CYA tests, and many are so “unhappy” with care.

Take care of yourself.
Try to maintain your health and avoid sickness.
If you are healthy, you don’t go the phookin hospital.


18 posted on 07/17/2026 5:16:50 AM PDT by Macoozie (Roll MAGA, roll!)
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To: Bobbyvotes

No one at the golf course could give you water’Gatorade before the ambulance arrived? EMS should have started you on an IV as protocol. Everyone was negligent in this story


19 posted on 07/17/2026 5:19:33 AM PDT by AppyPappy (They don't call you a Nazi because they think you are one. They do it to justify violence. )
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To: steve8714

“EMT’s administer IV fluids without a doctor.”

They are under DIRECT Doctor supervision, and liability. That’s why.

Good Samaritan laws don’t cover them for their mistakes.


20 posted on 07/17/2026 5:20:59 AM PDT by Macoozie (Roll MAGA, roll!)
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