Anne DePrato and Courtenay Springs Nursing Home
Updates
Update: Update: Anne DaPrato was transported to Cape Canaveral Hospital between
11:30 a.m. and 12 noon and attended by Dr. Bobs in the emergency room. Dr. Bobs
inserted an IV with no difficulty and checked her medical records. He did not do
any tests and she was not admitted. In spite of the fact that Anne endured
almost a week of dehydration (she had an IV for one day last week and has been
given no sustenance by mouth), Dr. Bobs said that her vitals were strong and
that she was doing remarkably well considering what she has gone through.
The emergency room doctor's diagnosis of Anne DaPrato's condition was in stark
contrast to the Hospice nurses' dire assessment of her condition. In response to
John DePrato's request to have his mother's IV reinserted last week, the
Courtenay Springs medical personnel claimed that it was impossible to insert an
IV in Anne's vein. The Hospice nurses remarked to John's niece, who as present
as Anne was being loaded into the ambulance, that Anne DePrato's condition was
so bad "she won't make it to the hospital." This was not the case. She had an
uneventful trip to the hospital and an IV was inserted into her vein without any
fuss or difficulty.
Why is Hospice involved anyway? Hospice is called in when a patient is
terminally ill. They are not legally allowed to render a patient terminal via
dehydration or any other means.
original report:
http://libertytothecaptives.net/anne.html
The nurses kept using phrases like dying process, etc. for a patient who was
being MADE to die. Yes. In Florida--in violation of the Florida statutes.
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