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– We still have patients admitted for treatment and who have complications in the form of brain injuries, says Dag Jacobsen, head of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Oslo University Hospital.
For the sake of patients and their families, the Oslo University Hospital does not want to go out with the wounds of several of the participants of the so-called cave party in Oslo at the end of August.
Jacobsen emphasizes to Dagbladet that there is an important message the hospital is sending now.
– Cells suffocate
– Family members do not want other adolescents and their relatives to be in the same situation. Carbon monoxide poisoning is one of the worst poisonings you can get. The body’s cells are suffocating and there is no antidote other than oxygen, says Jacobsen.
The superior hopes that the injuries inflicted on several of the participants of the match will not end up being permanent.
– We don’t have any guarantees for that. We treat them first, then they need rehab, Jacobsen tells Dagbladet.
Tonight, the Oslo University Hospital issued the following press release.
– In view of the duty of confidentiality, the Oslo University Hospital, where all the most serious cases were treated, has been restrictive with more information about patients. In consultation with the relatives of the remaining hospitalized patients, who are still unable to account for themselves, the hospital still wants to come out with more complete information on the severity of this condition. The reason for this is to try to prevent similar events in the belief that this “is not so dangerous anyway,” she says.
Two defendants after the cave party
27 to the hospital
The hospital will not say how many are still hospitalized, but confirms that there are more patients. They receive both regular and intensive treatment.
According to the police, up to 200 people may have attended the party at St. Hanshaugen in Oslo on Sunday night.
27 people were taken to the hospital after being poisoned with carbon monoxide.
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