Disaster Shock pics show how blood of boy, 13, sprayed over hospital wall as he died from Covid complications after coughing fit - Horrific sights of a child painfully dying



SHOCKING pics show how the blood of a 13-year-old boy sprayed over a hospital wall as he died from Covid complications after a coughing fit.

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A bereaved mother has shared the horrifying images of the blood spattered hospital room in a bid to urge Americans to take Covid seriously.

Stephanie Franek, 44, watched as doctors battled to save her son Peyton Baumgarth's life as the treatment to oxygenate his blood failed.


The youngster passed away just six days after developing symptoms of the killer infection when he became extremely fatigued and his nail beds turned blue.

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The mom-of-two endured another Covid loss when her sister Cyndi Crawford, 57, died five weeks after Peyton in the ICU.


Stephanie, a nurse from St Louis, Missouri, said: "One loss would have been heartbreaking alone but these two have completely shattered our hearts."


Stephanie tested positive for coronavirus on October 25.


She and her son experienced mild symptoms and began to quarantine.


She said: "His symptoms didn't seem life threatening and we didn't do a whole lot other than watch Netflix movies."

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Four days later, Stephanie became concerned as Peyton couldn't continue a conversation and she noticed that his fingernail and toenail beds had turned blue.


"I said: 'Buddy, I think we need to go to the hospital'."

They went to SSM Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital in St Louis where Peyton asked for a wheelchair.


Stephanie was horrified to discover that her son's oxygen levels had plummeted to just 44 per cent - a healthy person's blood oxygen levels are between 95 to 100 per cent.


"As a nurse, I have never seen someone walking and talking with an oxygen saturation level of just 44 per cent.


"We had only been in the ER for probably one hour when doctors decided they needed to put him on a ventilator."

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Stephanie never expected that her son would not be leaving hospital.


While Peyton suffered from a thyroid problem and had asthma, she did not consider him particularly at risk from the respiratory infection.


"I was scared he was going to be put on a ventilator but I also thought we'll get over this hump and bring him home."


Doctors treated Peyton with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) where blood is temporarily removed from the body to allow artificial oxygenation of the red blood cells and the removal of carbon dioxide.


His condition worsened suddenly on Saturday 31 October when he began to hemorrhage.


"He had this big coughing fit and he basically started to hemorrhage in his chest.


"The surgeons were trying to replace the ECMO and they were doing CPR to help circulate his blood because his pulse was so weak and his oxygen levels were so low."


As doctors desperately tried to replace the ECMO tubes in Peyton’s neck, the blood that had pooled in his chest sprayed over the walls.


Stephanie said: “It was all over the cardiothoracic surgeon and he just kept working.”

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Stephanie, who had been granted special permission to be in the hospital as she had Covid, watched as 10 nurses and four doctors battled for an hour and 15 minutes to save her son's life before calling the time of death.


"Never did I ever think this was going to happen,” Stephanie said.


"You don't hear about kids getting Covid and it being that serious.


"I was just in shock.


"I can't describe that sudden devastating loss."


Adding to Stephanie's pain, her sister Cyndi, a trauma registrar, came down with Covid a week before Thanksgiving.


She was also put on a ventilator and received ECMO but she passed away on December 7.


"Every day is a struggle to get out of bed and go through the motions," Stephanie said.


She shared that the only positive has been reuniting with her ex boyfriend, Chris Lottmann, 43, a welder, whom Peyton adored.


"He was very close with Peyton and I called him to tell him that Peyton had passed away and he was devastated.


"We have got back together and he has been a huge source of support for me and he has been here for me every moment that I've needed it.


"We think it was Peyton's wish and our gift from Peyton that he got us back together - he really didn't want us to break up in the first place."


Stephanie paid tribute to her son, saying that he had made more friends in his 13 years than some people make in a lifetime.


"He was the sweetest boy and he made everyone smile.


"In his 13 years of life, he made more friends than someone would make if they lived to 85."


Stephanie is speaking out about her son's death in the hopes that it will make Americans take Covid seriously and follow health guidelines.


"I hope people will take Covid more seriously and not say it is a political agenda or some type of fakes news or that it is the same as the flu.
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inb4 lazy cope acting like this kid was that fat or that childhood obesity isn't prevalent and a serious problem.
 
Doctors treated Peyton with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) where blood is temporarily removed from the body to allow artificial oxygenation of the red blood cells and the removal of carbon dioxide.
His condition worsened suddenly on Saturday 31 October when he began to hemorrhage.
"He had this big coughing fit and he basically started to hemorrhage in his chest.
"The surgeons were trying to replace the ECMO and they were doing CPR to help circulate his blood because his pulse was so weak and his oxygen levels were so low."
As doctors desperately tried to replace the ECMO tubes in Peyton’s neck, the blood that had pooled in his chest sprayed over the walls.


I'm the only one who is bothered be this extremly invasive covid treatment that actually may finished this boy?
Yes you are. A patient with extremely low blood o2 levels is going to need something like ECMO to survive.
 
The hypothyroidism doesn't appear to be a risk factor.

It depends what kind of asthma he had as to whether he was high risk.

The morbid obesity is certainly the biggest risk factor here.

Parents: don't let your kids be that fat, it's disgusting and dangerous.

Stories about kids dying from covid are a little dumb. Mortality is inevitable, and thousands of kids die every year. Total cause mortality of kids is going to be down this year, so this kid coughing up his insides is not really the right story to be telling in that fewer kids are dying at the moment than usual. It doesn't really matter if your kid died in a road accident, or from covid; a bunch of kids will die every year for whatever reason.
 
Thyroid problems don't really affect breathing and I doubt made him more susceptible to infection. Also the whole reason he was attached to the machine was because he had covid so I don't see how that should assuage my fears at all.

Hypothyroidism can weaken your respiratory muscles and decrease your lung function. One of the most common causes of hypo is Hashimoto's, which is an autoimmune disorder that produces antibodies that attack your own tissue. Untreated hypo can leave you at greater risk of infection. Hyper is a little different but it's more rare and I doubt it was what the kid was dealing with here.
 
Hypothyroidism can weaken your respiratory muscles and decrease your lung function. One of the most common causes of hypo is Hashimoto's, which is an autoimmune disorder that produces antibodies that attack your own tissue. Untreated hypo can leave you at greater risk of infection. Hyper is a little different but it's more rare and I doubt it was what the kid was dealing with here.

Unless that kid was eating fifty pies a day, it wasn't hyper.
 
It's the insane fear mongering as theater stories pushed by the media that make people roll their eyes.
It's the obvious emotional manipulation that gets me to knee-jerk the other way. Falling for that shit is how people wind up in cults.
Mom, you're an idiot.
Worse, a nurse. Turns out giving people a 2-year technical degree and "frontline worker" hero asspats for months on end turns them into massively smug incompetent idiots.
 
It's the obvious emotional manipulation that gets me to knee-jerk the other way. Falling for that shit is how people wind up in cults.

Worse, a nurse. Turns out giving people a 2-year technical degree and "frontline worker" hero asspats for months on end turns them into massively smug incompetent idiots.

A nurse who can't keep her own kid from getting morbidly obese is not someone whose credentials mean all that much.
 
There’s more to this story -
1. that’s not from a coughing fit it’s spray and it seems to be a mix of fluid and blood.
2. ECMO is last resort level stuff - kid must have been extremely unwell and not responding to less invasive oxygenation (ECMO is literally pumping your blood out, shoving O2 in and pumping it back. It’s expensive and invasive and risky.)
3. Seems to have been something wrong with blood pooling, and a panic about tubes, and where they were sited.


Very sad to see such a young kid die... at the same time, something has gone very wrong here. Well two things, the first being letting. A 13 year old whose diet you control be that big.
 
He was a bloody porker and you'd admit that if you had any integrity at all. Of course childhood obesity is a serious problem; one of the reasons for that is that it predisposes the poor kids to dying from a cough. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure and in this case, not carrying an extra 60 pounds (a conservative estimate) would have gone a long way to helping him fight through this.
Ok then if its not a biggie if overweight people die from covid, then be prepared to watch half the developed world die
 
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