Michigan Mama brave flame for a son in a hyperbaric chamber explosion: a lawyer
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The mother of a five -year -old boy in Michigan who died in an explosion of a hyperbaric chamber of oxygen while receiving treatment for Attention/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) And Apnea jumped into flames during bedtime to try to save her son, according to a family lawyer.
Annie Cooper was sitting in the waiting room, while her son Thomas Cooper received treatment in a chamber that contained 100% oxygen 31. January at the Oxford Center in Troy, about 24 miles north of Detroit.
“She was in the waiting room and she was warned that … something wrong happened. She hurried where her son was, and she tried and tried and tried to pull him out and … she wasn’t able to,” James said Harrington of Fieger’s Law Law Fox News Digital. “She supported serious, significant burns in this attempt to save her child.”
The Fieger Law is investigating the incident, and Harrington believes that Oxford Center “was influenced and had no resources for this emergency.”
Thomas Cooper, 5, from Michigan, died in the Hyperbarical Chamber 31 January. (Family Manual Cooper)
Oxford Center currently states on his website: “Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is alternative treatment What will reduce inflammation, oxygenous whole body, stimulate the growth of new healthy blood vessels and release of stem cells, up to 800% more after 20 sessions. Studies have reported to improve concentration, communication, work memory and sleep. “
Troy Police and fire officers He said Thomas was dead in the chamber when they arrived, while Annie suffered an injury to her hand. State police Michigan is currently the main agency investigating his death, according to Harrington.
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Troy police and fire officers said Thomas was dead in the chamber when they arrived at the scene. (Family Manual Cooper)
Patients receiving treatment with the Hyperbarical Chamber “will enter a special chamber to brew pure oxygen at the air pressure level 1.5 to 3 times higher than the average,” says Johns Hopkins. “The goal is to fill blood with enough oxygen to repair the tissue and restore normal body function.”
Harrington, who plans to sue the Oxford Center, said it was in the parent to ensure that their child gets the help they need to feel the most comfortable but certain medical “objects to promote and claim to claim that they claim that [hyperbaric chambers] Everything can cure everything, almost, and it is not necessarily supported by science, it is not necessarily supported by a reviewed literature. “
The doctor loses permit for the fire of the oxygen chamber in which he was killed 2
Patients receiving treatment with the Hyperbarical Chamber “will enter a special chamber to brew pure oxygen at the air pressure level 1.5 to 3 times higher than the average,” says Johns Hopkins. (Daily News and Evil Local Person/Ken McGagh/USA Today Network)
“They captivate people who desperately want to help family members, help their children, help loved ones and provide this oxygen therapy and make a state less influential in their lives,” Harrington explained, adding that the Hyperbarical Chamber is not “regulated” in Michigan in other countries.
Oxford Center did not respond to the Fox News Digital investigation.
The Cooper family lawyer plans to file a lawsuit in the coming weeks after the boy’s death in the hyperbaric chamber. (Family Manual Cooper)
Hyperbaric chambers have been used in the United States since the 20th century. They are usually used to treat dumplings of divers, carbone monoxide poisoning, gangrene and certain types of wounds or injuries that will not heal on their own, said Johns Hopkins.
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Annie and her husband, Thomas’s father, James Cooper, buried the five -year -old on February 13th. Thomas was known to all his friends, family and teachers as curious, energetic, smart, leaving the thoughtful little boy, “says his obituary.
“His favorite activities were running, jumping, rolling and hitting. He just started music and dance classes. He also attended an preschool institution,” he said. The five -year -old wanted to be a chef when he grew up so he could “cook with his mom and dad and stay with them forever.”