“Carlo was on the ground 20 minutes before help arrived”



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The autopsy of the corpse of Carlo Lobina, the 67-year-old positive for SarsCov2 who died on the night of September 20, collapsed to the ground a few meters from the ambulance that arrived to help him due to a very serious respiratory failure, will be carried out in the form of an accident probative.

This is the request of the lawyer Marcello Caddori, a 67-year-old lawyer for the Seui family, to the investigating judge of the Lanusei court who is handling the case.

“The man arrived in via Roma near the ambulance after a very steep climb and fell to the ground a few meters from the waiting vehicle,” says the lawyer. “He tried to get up but could not, several citizens present invoked the intervention of the 118 operators,” he continues, “who waited 20 minutes before intervening and did so with a manual heart massage without using the defibrillator.”

As he got up, he pleaded with the 118 operators: “They’re here for me,” he said, before falling back to the ground.

Being in the presence of a patient with positive coronavirus, the lawyer continues, “he could not leave the house to get to the ambulance, as he was explicitly requested by phone, but rescuers would have had to go to his home and possibly pick him up with him. “. a stretcher “.

THE RECONSTRUCTION OF THE LEGAL – Carlo Lobina, who emigrated to Germany, had returned to Sardinia in July to stay a few months with his elderly mother, and here he would have contracted the virus. He was in quarantine at home, but his conditions worsened at 5 p.m. on September 19, when a medical team found him in severe respiratory failure.

Hence the decision to admit him to the Holy Trinity. The situation is complicated, the ambulance is late and cannot reach the man’s house in the narrow streets of the town, so he is asked to arrive on foot. Lobina leaves, again according to the lawyer’s reconstruction, travels 200 meters up a very steep climb with the suitcase and upon reaching the top falls to the ground. Stay there for 20 minutes before rescuers attempt defibrillator-free resuscitation.

(Unioneonline / L)

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