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Home / Health / Diabetic Man Dies After Hospital 'Hyperventilation' Misdiagnosis

Diabetic Man Dies After Hospital 'Hyperventilation' Misdiagnosis

9 Feb

•

Summary

  • A diabetic man died after being misdiagnosed with hyperventilation.
  • He waited nearly five hours untreated in the emergency room.
  • His parents filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the hospital.
Diabetic Man Dies After Hospital 'Hyperventilation' Misdiagnosis

A wrongful death lawsuit has been filed by the parents of George Lubrano, a 24-year-old Type 1 diabetic who died on December 16, 2024, at Mercy Hospital in Springfield, Missouri. Lubrano allegedly endured a nearly five-hour wait in the emergency room without adequate treatment.

His parents claim hospital staff misdiagnosed his critical symptoms, including vomiting and severe breathing difficulties, as mere hyperventilation. Despite his critically high blood sugar and malfunctioning insulin pump, Lubrano reportedly received no timely medical intervention.

The lawsuit alleges that Lubrano's condition, diabetic ketoacidosis, was preventable with proper and prompt medical care. He ultimately suffered cardiac arrest and died after his health rapidly deteriorated in the waiting room.

His parents are seeking damages for their loss, asserting that 'good, safe, and timely medical choices' by hospital workers could have saved their son's life. The hospital stated it is working toward a resolution with the family.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
George Lubrano, a Type 1 diabetic, died from complications of diabetic ketoacidosis after allegedly waiting nearly five hours untreated in the emergency room at Mercy Hospital, with staff misdiagnosing his symptoms as hyperventilation.
The lawsuit claims that hospital staff failed to provide proper and timely medical care to George Lubrano, leading to his preventable death due to misdiagnosing his critical diabetic condition.
Diabetic ketoacidosis is a life-threatening condition that occurs when the body cannot create enough insulin, but it can typically be treated and reversed within hours with fairly non-invasive measures.

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