Deceased/Not Found CT - Jennifer Dulos, 50, New Canaan, 24 May 2019 *ARRESTS* #40

Status
Not open for further replies.
  • #361
  • #362
Possible

they aren’t going “all out” to save him?
They did get him out of the car and start life saving CPR...it’s not like he should have been out on bond anyway and it is not like he called the paramedics before he made the decision to gas himself in the garage.

such a travesty for the kiddos. I still think CT needs to change its bond policies.
I’m angry for JFd family especially if he doesn’t pull through. He took the ultimate act of control over Jennifer and the ultimate act of control over his life if he doesn’t make it.

this is imo a terrible day for justice and for the case. I’m just angry. Ughhhhhh
 
  • #363
Anyone else think Mrs. Farber is paying for this medical care? I feel like if this was a normal person they wouldn't have gone to this length. If I was her I'd be doing everything I could to keep him alive to stand trial.
 
  • #364
Possible

they aren’t going “all out” to save him?
That would be medical neglect. Medical crews do their very best on every patient and not to do so would jeopardize their jobs. We might not like FD, but the medical team will do their best to save him until they can't.

I'm not in the medical profession, but perhaps someone can chime in about ethics. You can't just let someone get sub-par care because they are considered despicable.

jmo
 
  • #365
  • #366
So d

does Greenwich.
Very strange to go to Jacobi IMO.

unless those chambers are in use.....hence send to a hospital with no one using their chamber
 
  • #367
If they don't really want to save him they wouldn't have wasted resources and brought him over to NYC. I feel like he doesn't look that bad just my opinion. I mean he could be in a worse condition...
 
  • #368
My nephew is a casualty of the fentanyl epidemic and experienced something similar. He OD’d and had no pulse when first responders arrived. They worked on him for 30 minutes and he recovered a weak pulse on the way to the ER. It was enough to keep him alive for several more days but ultimately he had to be removed from life support.

Not sure about the physiology of it but something about that period of time without oxygen often leads to swelling at the brain stem and a likely permanent vegetative state. So the family chose to pull his plug. Thank goodness, at the end, most of his organs were salvageable. He is gone but three other lives were saved or improved. (Silver linings and all that...) Not sure if the same is true for those with CO poisoning.

MOO.
I'm so sorry that your nephew was a victim of fentanyl. The epidemic is real -- our local HS hosted a funeral for 4 students that died of fentanyl over Thanksgiving break.
 
  • #369
  • #370
@HeidiVoight

“The fact that CPR was done is a really bad prognostic factor... if the poisoning was so severe that someone lost their heartbeat or wasn’t able to breathe... they would be unlikely to recover fully from it.” - Dr. John Delgado, Hartford Hospital Toxicologist
 
  • #371
JUST IN: Stamford court officials say the emergency bond hearing for Fotis Dulos will happen tomorrow at 2pm without him.
@News12CT

Judge White does not play
Now I want him to wake up even more.
 
  • #372
Suicide is too easy. He needs to go to prison for life. It would not surprise me if he just wanted to manipulate people and the courts might feel sorry for him.

Actually, MOO he was stuck in the house reading social media.
He is broke, old life gone completely. He had conviced himself JF was some kind of devil, got others to buy in.
Came to see he would never be wealthy or treated like a normal man again, because the trial was going to inevitably lead to his possession of his wife's bloody clothes, and other blood soaked items. MOO it is avery slim chance that NP can get that surpressed.
Just think, a man graduating from Brown could fairly successfully rebuild after a divorce, if he took responsibility for having an affair, got a job, an apartment and started over even probably with 1/2 time custody.
Tale of two men.
 
  • #373
critical versus grave condition.
Fotis is stated as critical

Condition. Grave or moribund condition is used to describe a condition where recovery is not expected. Critical condition is used when a patient is unstable and will not live without a significant amount of intervention but has a reasonable chance of recovery.

Source: HealthTap, What does "critical vs grave" condition mean? - Answered by top doctors on HealthTap
 
  • #374
Update: Fd looks fine from the other side of the white cloth. Not many things attached to him for the transport. Holy cr**

All bundled up in the cold, but not much else, no tubes, no nurse next to his head...ugh...he escapes the hossy by sundown tomorrow...
 
  • #375
  • #376
  • #377
I wonder if he recently had DNR orders put in place, and whether that would be honored given his suicide attempt.
IMO, narcissists don’t really want to kill themselves
 
  • #378
  • #379
looks like he’s intubated to me
Agree. Looks like a mobile ventilator might be in use.

Here is an example of what the setup of one might look like (this is NOT Fd): medicalventilator.png
 
  • #380
@HeidiVoight

“The fact that CPR was done is a really bad prognostic factor... if the poisoning was so severe that someone lost their heartbeat or wasn’t able to breathe... they would be unlikely to recover fully from it.” - Dr. John Delgado, Hartford Hospital Toxicologist

They also told a family member he was dead at first, then must have had to change that
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
143
Guests online
2,518
Total visitors
2,661

Forum statistics

Threads
633,190
Messages
18,637,731
Members
243,442
Latest member
Jsandy210
Back
Top