Posted on 01/07/2014 9:43:49 AM PST by Drew68
“You’re applying abnormal pressure to keep the lungs open and functioning, which creates small tears in the lining of the air sacs and bronchial tree, opening up the possibility of infection.”
Thanks. I felt it was something that machine caused. I didn’t read that article, been seeing the problem on the news. I didn’t read it because I’m still touchy about my own husband’s death and prefer not to read about other people being that ill as it just brings back his death in 2011, two years ago.
People who are brain dead can recover.
http://www.notdeadyet.org/2008/03/brain-dead-man-comes-alive-miracle.html
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2011/05/11/husband-celebrates-miracle-brain-dead-wife-wakes-hospital/
http://archive.kare11.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=498009
In 1997 I lost my mother due to Brain Hemorrhage. The doctor came in showing us her X-ray of her brain. It showed a large void just a dark blank space on her brain. My older brother decided to keep mother on the ventilator until everyone can come and see her. One of my cousin including me notice she had a very faint blink, but my brother got mad at me, and told me to accept it. That time came and the nurse came in and she started inject something into her IV. My brother asked her what was that for. The nurse stated it was so my mother would NOT FEEL pain. I looked at her and thought “NOT FEEL PAIN...I thought she was brain dead?”. I turned to my brother and gave him this look. Being the youngest I kept my mouth shut. I did not feel my mother spirit left her body, don’t ask but I can sense it. It wasn’t until after half an hour I felt it did. All these years I have always carried this guilt with me and will be with me until God calls me home.
As with this little Angel. I do not sense her spirit has totally left her body. It has been coming and going. Now that damage has been done to the body worse, I pray that she goes to her Heavenly Father.
No. They do not. The two American cases you cite were of people who were not truly brain dead. Australia uses different criteria for brain death than American doctors do.
People in Jahi's condition, who are truly brain dead, do not recover.
Many thanks for the explanation.
There was a young teen, on respirator, whatever else. They were getting ready to harvest his organs. The grandmother went with the family to do what families do in those circumstances. When she got in the room, the grandmother called on Jesus to let him live. He did. When he could communicate he told how distressed he was that they were going to harvest his organs, so his consciousness was somewhere taking it in. It took him some time to fully recover.
My sense is that nothing is impossible with God but when a story is so public like that, it's not going to happen nor is it with anybody who has flatlined. The above two cases are the only ones I know about and I can't say that they totally flatlined.
The centurian's daughter, the widow of Naim's son, Elijah saved a widow's son.
They changed the definition of death to brain flatlining rather than heart ceasing to beat. But life support keeps a heart beating. I don't know if they did it so they could harvest organs or what. I know that is one big thing to declare a person brain dead so they can do that if given permission.
Re your post #42, my money is on all four, with an accent on “ignorant.”
She’s dead gibbs
Wonder what kind of "nurse" qualifications the grandmother has? Almost everyone who has ever applied a Band-Aid likes to call themselves "nurse".
‘her medical condition, SEPARATE from the brain issue, is not good.”’
Perhaps if they did not deny her treatment, and nourishment, her body would have been in so much better shape. I believe it would.
The “experts” are not always correct, which is why we should give every human being every chance.
Here’s just a couple of examples, where the “experts” were wrong:
“For example, in 2008 Zack Dunlap was declared brain-dead after an ATV accident based on exactly the same criterion offered in Jahis case: a PET scan revealed that he had no blood flowing to his brain. His body was prepared for organ harvesting, but alert family members were able to elicit behavioral signs that showed he was anything but brain dead. Forty-eight days later, Zack walked out of a rehab center and went home.
Colleen Burns was another example of how fallible a medical diagnosis of brain death can be. Admitted to a hospital in Syracuse, New York, after a drug overdose, she, like Zack Dunlap, was declared brain dead and prepared for organ harvesting. She woke up on the operating table shortly before the operation began, and was discharged shortly thereafter.”
Read more: Remember the Humanity of Jahi McMath | TIME.com http://ideas.time.com/2014/01/07/remember-the-humanity-of-jahi-mcmath/#ixzz2plc3UXVN
A corpse can neither be treated nor nourished back to life. Please see the other four or five threads, in addition to this one, to become educated on why she is (very sadly) dead. She is with Him, and has been for weeks now.
A PET scan apparently was the only test performed on Zach Dunlap to come up with the diagnosis of brain death but because his brain was swollen, PET scans are often not reliable. Again the hospital did not follow standards and procedures. Jahi has on the other hand been confirmed to be brain dead, not just by a PET scan but a multitude of other tests performed by several doctors including one not affiliated with Childrens Hospital appointed by the court and over the course of, not hours or days but over several weeks.
Here is an informative article written by a neurologist who discusses why and what may have been the problems with Dunlaps case.
http://theness.com/neurologicablog/index.php/brain-dead/
Colleen Burns was another example of how fallible a medical diagnosis of brain death can be. Admitted to a hospital in Syracuse, New York, after a drug overdose, she, like Zack Dunlap, was declared brain dead and prepared for organ harvesting. She woke up on the operating table shortly before the operation began, and was discharged shortly thereafter.
She was not declared brain dead, she was thought to have undergone cardiac death but all in all, proper procedures were not followed and several mistakes were made, the hospital was fined but this was not a case of someone who was actually and properly diagnosed as being brain dead by several neurologists using multiple tests, coming back to life.
Patient Colleen S. Burns was reportedly admitted into St. Joseph's emergency department in 2009 after overdosing on Xanax, Benadryl and a muscle relaxant. Hospital notes obtained by the Post-Standard revealed that the doctors thought she had undergone "cardiac death." After doctors consulted with the family, they agreed to withdraw life support and donate her organs.
What actually happened was that Burns was in a deep coma from her overdose, and did not have irreversible brain damage.
The Health Department discovered that the staff did not perform a recommended treatment to stop the drugs from being absorbed into her stomach and intestines, did not test to see if she was free of all drugs and did not complete enough brain scans. They also did not wait long enough before recommending the patient was taken off life support.
In addition, her doctors did not pay attention to a nurse's notes which stated that Burns was not brain dead and in fact was getting better. A nurse performing a routine reflex test had discovered that Burns' toes had curled downward after the bottom of her foot was touched.
Despite all the signs that Burns was still alive and had brain function, a nurse injected her with a sedative and failed to note it on the chart.
While certainly the Dunlap and Burns cases should give one pause, should cause families to make sure all the proper diagnostic tests and procedures for diagnosing brain death have been followed and the positive outcome of such extremely rare cases is that doctors and hospitals have become more conservative and cautious to make sure their diagnosis is correct (I believe the standard in CA and in most states is that the brain death diagnosis has to be confirmed by at least one other doctor and that not just one test like a PET scan is performed), this doesnt mean that all or even a high number of such diagnosis are in error.
In very rare cases were a patient has not been properly diagnosed as brain dead, the patient sometimes recovers seemingly miraculously, but a misdiagnosis of brain death or cardiac death followed by recovery, is not the same thing as a truly brain dead person coming back to life. That simply does not, cannot happen.
She is already decomposing.
Thank you! It is of the utmost importance that people know this!
The family needs mental health evaluations. If this happened to one of my babies, I hope somebody would get me the help that I need.
I feel bad for the girl because she is just laying there and decomposing.
I feel bad for the girl because she is just laying there and decomposing.
I feel bad for the girl because she is just laying there and decomposing.
Bookmark
There are reports that at least three of the family members suctioned blood from Jahi's throat before alerting the ICU nurses that there was a problem. Over-aggressive suctioning could have exacerbated the bleeding problem.
The grandmother, who is an LPN and not an RN, admitted in an interview that she suctioned blood from Jahi's throat.
These reports of family involvement come from family members of other patients in the ICU who are not covered by HIPAA.
There are also reports - which I have never been able to trace except for comments to articles - that the mother brought a cheeseburger to the ICU for Jahi to eat post-surgery. I doubt it, but anything's possible.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.