The family of a woman
who died after being moved out of a trauma room to accommodate the ailing
Michael Jackson plans to sue both the US hospital and the star, it emerged.
Manuela Gomez Ruiz, 74, was transferred
out of the main trauma room at the Marian Medical Centre in Santa Maria,
California, when Jackson was rushed in suffering from "flu-like symptoms" last
week.
Her family claims she was taken
off a machine ventilator and her breathing was instead assisted manually by a
handpump.
Mrs Ruiz was being treated
after having a heart attack but suffered two more that day before she died.
Her daughter-in-law, Anna Ruiz, told US
network program ABC News she saw Jackson come into the emergency unit.
"He walked in," she said. "When I saw
him, he was walking unassisted."
Mrs
Ruiz's daughter, Maria Elena Ortiz, was also in the hospital and objected when
her mother was moved.
"Why does she
have to be moved if he's coming in for a stomach flu?" she said.
"I said, 'My mother just had a heart
attack and I think it's more critical than a stomach flu'. They didn't say
anything."
The family claims the
chaos caused by Jackson's arrival distracted staff. They said equipment had to
be crammed into the smaller room and they were limited to two visitors at a
time.
Those visitors could not then
leave because the hospital restricted movement in the corridors when Jackson
arrived, the family claims.
Relatives
allege that the hospital's policy "needs to be changed" if a patient with flu
can take precedence over someone with a heart attack. They have hired a lawyer
to sue the hospital
and the star.
Jackson's publicist Raymone Bain issued a statement saying: "Michael
Jackson sends his condolences to the family of the deceased.
"However, it is outrageous that Michael
Jackson's name would be invoked into a situation of which he had no authority or
control. It appears that ABC is deliberate in its attempt to circumvent Michael
Jackson from receiving a fair trial."
Jury selection in Jackson's child molestation trial was delayed while
the singer recovered from the flu. Opening arguments are scheduled to begin in
the Santa Maria court on Monday.
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