> A 26-year-old dental student in Connecticut died in an intensive care unit that was overseen by a remote "tele-health" doctor who pronounced him dead on a video screen after failing to "effectively communicate" his medical needs, a lawsuit says.
> Conor Hylton's parents are suing Yale New Haven Health, which owns and operates the Bridgeport Hospital Milford Campus where their son died in 2024, and Northeast Medical Group — which is also part of Yale New Haven Health — for negligence that they say ultimately led to his death.
Not sure about medical guidelines but for most stuff given to a patient wouldn't they need a doctor's prescription? The list of things that nurses and assistants can give to patients without a doctor's direction is pretty short I think?
> A 26-year-old dental student in Connecticut died in an intensive care unit that was overseen by a remote "tele-health" doctor who pronounced him dead on a video screen after failing to "effectively communicate" his medical needs, a lawsuit says.
> Conor Hylton's parents are suing Yale New Haven Health, which owns and operates the Bridgeport Hospital Milford Campus where their son died in 2024, and Northeast Medical Group — which is also part of Yale New Haven Health — for negligence that they say ultimately led to his death.
I wonder why they didn’t give him some ethanol or a benzodiazepine.
I’m no doctor but a 26 year old presenting with pancreatitis and dehydration is almost certainly an alcoholic, dude was probably wracked with DTs :(
Not sure about medical guidelines but for most stuff given to a patient wouldn't they need a doctor's prescription? The list of things that nurses and assistants can give to patients without a doctor's direction is pretty short I think?
A remote doctor can prescribe.
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