#Carole Brunton Davis children
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Link
By Allyson Chiu
July 7, 2020 at 6:52 a.m. EDT
At just 17, Carsyn Leigh Davis had already experienced more challenges than most people face in their entire lives. From age 2, she battled a host of health issues, including cancer and a rare autoimmune disorder. But not once did Carsyn let the serious ailments get her down, her family said.
So when the high school student from Fort Myers, Fla., died last month after contracting the novel coronavirus, her death â which marked Lee Countyâs youngest virus-related fatality at the time â sent shock waves through the community. Touching tributes to Carsyn, often pictured smiling broadly, poured forth and thousands of dollars were donated to GoFundMe campaigns.
âEven through the ravages of Covid, fighting to breathe, she never once shed a tear, complained or expressed fear,â her mother, Carole Brunton Davis, wrote in a statement shared on one of the fundraising pages.
A medical examinerâs report recently made public, however, has raised questions about Carsynâs case. The Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner found that the immunocompromised teen went to a large church party with roughly 100 other children where she did not wear a mask and social distancing was not enforced. Then, after getting sick, nearly a week passed before she was taken to the hospital, and during that time her parents gave her hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malarial drug touted by President Trump that the Food and Drug Administration has issued warnings about, saying usage could cause potentially deadly heart rhythm problems.
Carsynâs case, which gained renewed interest on Sunday after it was publicized by Florida data scientist Rebekah Jones, drew fierce backlash from critics, including a number of medical professionals, who condemned the actions taken by the teenâs family in the weeks before her death. Florida has more than 206,000 reported cases of coronavirus and 3,880 deaths as of early Tuesday.
In a scathing write-up on her Florida COVID Victims site, Jones described the church gathering as a âCOVID Party.â She alleged that Brunton Davis took Carsyn to the event to âintentionally expose her immuno-compromised daughter to this virus.â
Brunton Davis and the church reportedly behind the event could not be reached for comment late Monday night.
As Brunton Davis wrote in the statement after Carsynâs death, the teen did not have an âeasy life,â largely because of her health complications. In addition to cancer and the autoimmune disorder, she also suffered from obesity and a nervous-system disorder that improved when she was 5, the medical examinerâs report stated.
Still, Carsyn remained active in her community, her family said. She was a member of her high schoolâs varsity bowling team and dedicated time to volunteering with organizations such as Special Olympics. As an honors student, she excelled in school and particularly enjoyed her AP photography class.
Carsynâs family also noted that she was âa devout Christian and follower of Jesus,â and âactively involved in Youth Church at First Assembly of God in Ft. Myers.â
On June 10, Carsyn was one of dozens of young people who attended the church event mentioned in the report. While the report did not include specifics about the gathering, Jones shared images of a June 10 post from the First Youth Churchâs Facebook page advertising an event scheduled for that night called a âRelease Party.â The churchâs page has since been taken down.
âService is back and better than ever!â the post said. âThere will be games, awesome giveaways, free food, a DJ and music, and the start of our new sermon series.â
The medical examiner wrote that Carsynâs parents gave her azithromycin as a preventive measure from June 10 to 15. The antibiotic in combination with hydroxychloroquine has been floated by Trump as a potential coronavirus treatment. According to the report, Brunton Davis is a nurse and a man identified as Carsynâs father is a physician assistant.
But while she was taking the medicine, Carsyn began feeling ill, developing a headache, sinus pressure and a mild cough, the report said. Then on June 19, Brunton Davis noticed that Carsyn âlooked âgrayâ â as she slept, prompting the mother to hook her daughter up to oxygen normally used by Carsynâs grandfather, who has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD.
At some point, Carsyn was also given a dose of hydroxychloroquine by her parents â an action that came less than a week after the FDA pulled its emergency use authorization for that drug and chloroquine, another anti-malarial medication. A letter dated June 15 stated that the drugs âwere unlikely to be effectiveâ for covid-19 and that any potential benefits were outweighed by safety risks, including heart problems, The Washington Postâs Laurie McGinley and Carolyn Y. Johnson reported.
It remains unclear whether Carsyn had a prescription for hydroxychloroquine.
Not long after the oxygen and hydroxychloroquine were administered, Carsynâs parents took her to a local medical center. She was later transferred to the pediatric intensive care unit at a nearby childrenâs hospital, where she was confirmed to have the coronavirus.
Carsynâs parents declined to have her intubated, and she instead started receiving plasma therapy, the report said. But by June 22, her condition wasnât improving and âintubation was required,â the medical examiner wrote.
Despite âaggressive therapy and maneuvers,â Carsyn still didnât get better, leading Brunton Davis to request âheroic effortsâ even knowing that her daughter âhad low chance of meaningful survival,â according to the report.
But none of the procedures worked and Carsyn continued to deteriorate. She died shortly after 1 p.m. on June 23, two days after her 17th birthday.
âWe are incredibly saddened by her passing at this young age, but are comforted that she is pain free,â Brunton Davis wrote in the GoFundMe statement.
Jones, however, argued that Carsynâs death could have been prevented.
âI started looking into her mother, the church where the COVID party was held with more than 100 children, her health history, and who she was and I felt so angry and sad that this happened,â she told Newsweek.
Stay safe and informed with our free Coronavirus Updates newsletter
On Twitter, Jones shared images of posts from a Facebook profile with Brunton Davisâs name, which is no longer online. One post expressed support for anti-mask efforts and another criticized the methods doctors were using to treat Carsyn.
âThe doctors are refusing to give her Hydroxychloriquine [sic], citing ânew studiesâ that it does not work and can be harmful. Using it is against their policy,â the post read. âThis is very upsetting to me, as many of you know how I feel about that.â
On Sunday, Jones, who created the independent coronavirus dashboard after she said she was fired by the Florida Department of Health in May for refusing to make changes to how the state presented its data publicly, wrote that she was âso saddened for this girl and the loss of life.â
âEvery death on this website is heartbreaking. Every minute lost in someoneâs life is a tragedy,â she wrote, referring to her database. âBut this one will stick with me long after this virus has torn through our communities.â
17 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Who is Carole Brunton Davis? Bio, Age, Wiki, Daughterâs Died of COVID-19, Carsyn Davis, GoFundMe
Who is Carole Brunton Davis? Bio, Age, Wiki, Daughterâs Died of COVID-19, Carsyn Davis, GoFundMe
Carole Brunton Davis Bio â Wiki
Carole Brunton Davis is a registered nurse in Fort Myers, Florida, who is under fire because of the at-home care she gave to her daughter, Carsyn, who died of COVID-19 related complications after attending a 100-person church party. The latter claim is found in the medical examinerâs report, which also describes how Carsyn Davisâs parents tried to treat her withâŚ
View On WordPress
#Carole Brunton Davis#Carole Brunton Davis age#Carole Brunton Davis bio#Carole Brunton Davis biography#Carole Brunton Davis children#Carole Brunton Davis daughter#Carole Brunton Davis daughter died#Carole Brunton Davis facebook#Carole Brunton Davis family#Carole Brunton Davis husband#Carole Brunton Davis linkedin#Carole Brunton Davis nurse#Carole Brunton Davis twitter#Carole Brunton Davis wiki#Carsyn Davis#Carsyn Davis age#Carsyn Davis biography#Carsyn Davis career#Carsyn Davis died#Carsyn Davis died of covid19#Carsyn Davis mother#Carsyn Davis wiki#who is Carsyn Davis
0 notes
Text
Who is Carole Brunton Davis Wiki, Biography, Age, Net Worth, Instagram, Twitter, Unknown FACTS YOU NEED TO KNOW
Who is Carole Brunton Davis Wiki, Biography, Age, Net Worth, Instagram, Twitter, Unknown FACTS YOU NEED TOÂ KNOW
Carole Brunton Davis Wiki ��� Carole Brunton Davis Biography
Carole Brunton Davis is a registered nurse in Fort Myers, Florida, who is under fire because of the at-home care she gave to her daughter, Carsyn, who died of COVID-19 related complications after attending a 100-person church party. The latter claim is found in the medical examinerâs report, which also describes how Carsyn Davisâs parentsâŚ
View On WordPress
#Carole Brunton Davis Age#Carole Brunton Davis Bio#Carole Brunton Davis Biography#Carole Brunton Davis Children#Carole Brunton Davis Facebook#Carole Brunton Davis Family#Carole Brunton Davis Instagram#Carole Brunton Davis Known Fast Facts#Carole Brunton Davis Net worth#Carole Brunton Davis Reddit#Carole Brunton Davis Twitter#Carole Brunton Davis Wiki#Carole Brunton Davis Wikipedia#How old is Carole Brunton Davis
0 notes
Photo
Florida teen dies after conspiracy theorist mom takes her to church âCOVID partyâ and tries to treat her with Trump-approved drug: report A Florida mother allegedly took her high-risk teenage daughter to a âCOVID partyâ at their church, tried treating the girl at home with unproven drugs when she got sick â and then hailed her as a patriot after she died. Carsyn Davis died June 23, two days after her 17th birthday, after she contracted the coronavirus, reported the News-Press, but former Florida data scientist Rebekah Jones detailed shocking claims in a medical examinerâs report about her illness. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigated the teenâs last two weeks in the medical examinerâs report, which Jones said shows her mother, Carole Brunton Davis, had taken her on June 10 to a church-sponsored event to intentionally expose her immunocompromised daughter, who had survived cancer at 2, to the potentially deadly coronavirus. More than 100 mask-free children attended the event, and Davis allegedly gave her daughter azithromycin, an anti-bacterial drug with no known benefits for fighting COVID-19, after she developed headaches, sinus pressure and a cough, Jones reported. Davis â whose Facebook page is awash in QAnon conspiracy theories, anti-vaccine and coronavirus misinformation and dubious legal theories â next put the girl on her grandfatherâs oxygen machine after she âlooked grayâ on June 19, Jones reported. Then she gave the girl hydroxychloroquine, an antimalarial drug touted as a cure by President Donald Trump, despite evidence of deadly side effects, and Carsynâs condition worsened. Davis finally took her daughter to a hospital, where she was admitted to a pediatric intensive-care unit â but declined intubation until it was too late, Jones wrote. The hospital started plasma therapy on June 20 and 21, Jones reported, but Carsynâs cardio-respiratory system was too seriously damaged and she died June 22. âWe are incredibly saddened by her passing at this young age, but are comforted that she is pain free,â Davis told the News-Press after her daughterâs death. https://www.instagram.com/p/CCUXIDJHcLJ/?igshid=t8t97k28lb2q
0 notes