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Joined by a 17-year-old Lee County girl who died last month at COVID-19, Fort Myers Church claimed social media claims that members had been deliberately exposed to the coronavirus and ignored safety guidelines on masks and social distance. I strongly denied.

In a Facebook post on Tuesday, God’s first general assembly called all such claims “false and defamatory.”

“These claims are completely false and are based on irresponsible speculation and inaccurate information,” the Church statement reads. “These false reports have been picked up, perpetuated, and posted through national, local, and social media, forcing the Church to be relentlessly attacked and issue this statement to uncover the truth. died.”

After that post, the church representative did not respond to the interview request. A few hours later, First Assembly made the Facebook page private and only available to some members.

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According to a medical inspector in Miami-Dade County, Carcin Lee Davis died on June 23 as a result of COVID-19 complications. For most of her life, the girl suffered from various health problems, including rare nervous system disorders, obesity, and autoimmune disorders, the report said.

She attended the first church event on June 10, with 100 people attending, according to a survey report. The report noted that she did not wear a mask or keep a social distance.

The alleged allegation of the Church’s role in the death penalty comes from Rebekah Jones, a former data officer at the Florida State Department of Health, posting on Twitter this week after the state government accused the company of underestimating the COVID case. There is.

Jones characterized the event on June 10 as the “Coronavirus Party” and posted a link to a copy of the doctor’s report. USA TODAY-The report, which Florida also got on Monday, does not claim that event participants were intentionally exposed.

Jones also posted a screen grab on a social media post by Jones’ mother Carroll Davis.

Attempts to contact the family for comments failed this week. The girl’s mother, Carol Brunton Davis, removed her public Facebook page.

Jones also showed a screen grab of a previous announcement from the church before the event. However, the case was not specifically claimed as a means of deliberate exposure.

Full text of June 10 church message on Facebook:

“The service is back and better than ever. We’re holding a release party at Jim Tonight at 6:45. Games, great gifts, free food, DJs and music, and the beginning of a new sermon series. And , We will start the summer night postcard (sic) with karaoke and basketball!

Jones said that this and the interpretation of other church posts meant that the first parliament did not take the threat of COVID seriously.

And she states that a medical examiner’s report of her death has given her mother an antibiotic drug, azithromycin-currently being studied as a potential treatment for COVID-19-at the time of the event. And fell ill as a protective measure in front of the girl.

“Mom explained it was a way to prevent getting sick,” Jones said. “But if it’s not the Revelation Party, why do you literally start giving her the drug that day?”

The girl’s mother is a registered nurse and the man listed as the father in the doctor’s report is a medical assistant.

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Investigators said that Kashin Lee Davis developed frontal headache, sinus pressure, and a mild cough three days after the church event, assuming the family was simply a sinus infection.

However, the symptoms did not go away, and by June 19, her parents had noticed that she looked “grey” while she was sleeping. The girl’s mother, a registered nurse, determined that the girl had low oxygen levels.

Therefore, she reportedly gives oxygen from her grandfather’s portable oxygen tank, which he uses to treat his chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Before taking the girl to the hospital later that day, the girl’s parents were given an unspecified dose of hydroxychloroquine, an antimalarial and lupus drug that received widespread attention from President Trump as a potential means of treating her with the virus. Was given to her.

I have some case studies of medicines PromisedAnd many others Concluded That’s what it is Ineffective at all And in fact it can increase the likelihood of health complications. In any case, Food and Drug Administration Warned Do not use the medicine outside the hospital.

The hospital determined that the girl was positive for COVID-19, and the inspector reported that she recommended wearing a breathing tube.

The family decided to oppose it, the report said and instead asked her to receive plasma treatment. The girl’s condition continued to deteriorate for the next two days and the hospital forced her to be intubated.

She was eventually transferred to the Nicklaus Children’s Hospital in Miami, where she died.

The girl’s mother has a clear and active nursing license with no records of disciplinary action. The man who was characterized in the research report as the girl’s father is a physician assistant. He had one unspecified fine in connection with his license.

The Florida Department of Health, which oversees the medical license, did not return a request for comment.

Frank Gluck is a Watchdog Reporter for The News-Press and Naples Daily News. Connect with him on [email protected] or Twitter: @FrankGluck

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