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Mia-Ann’s epilepsy has been “really well controlled” since 2019 thanks to the testimony of Dr. Alok Gaurav, a specialist in children’s services at Cwm Taf Morgannwg University Health Board.
Regarding Mia-Ann’s medical cause of death, Dr. Stephen Leadbeatter, senior lecturer in forensic pathology at Cardiff University, stated: “Although we don’t have any proof.
She was submerged in water, she was in the water, and her mouth and nose were in the water.” That still seems like immersion to me. It is impossible to deny the role that water performed.
I can state that a youngster with PCDH19-related epilepsy died as a result of immersion. According to the document PEOPLE was able to get,
After the inquiry, Mia-Ann’s death was determined to be an accident. According to the medical record, she died from “Immersion in a child with PCDH19-related epilepsy.”