• It seems the doctor dropped the ball on this one, from the context in the article.

    But the incident happened at the lounge at the hotel she was staying at, not during an activity organized by (or even at) the conference. I’m not entirely sure how it’s the fault of the conference (as the article summary seem to imply).

    • If the doctor did drop the ball here they would have a lawsuit against them so fast. That’s why if no lawsuit comes, then it might just be a made up story to cover up too much drinking, which is really sad if that’s the case. Doesn’t add up.

      • That doesn’t really mashed any sense, what’s there to cover up. She was drinking with her husband and employees, became unresponsive followed by heavy vomiting.

        It was her husband who was asking the police/ doctor for help.

        Its not like she is aldi trying to apologise for running around abusing staff and pissing on others event stalls. What’s there to cover up?

  •  skozzii   ( @skozzii@lemmy.ca ) 
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    3 months ago

    This doesn’t seem to add up, certainly sounds like she just had too much to drink. If she was working her ass off all day she was likely dehydrated, and maybe didn’t eat enough or anything. If I thought my wife was drugged I would be demanding the test with threats of lawsuits if they didn’t.

    As a CEO she is expected to be professional, and this could be a career killer for her. Maybe she thought it would go away if she said she was drugged instead, and could excuse the behavior - not realizing how big something like that could become.

    If all this was true, they would be taking legal action against the hospital without question at this point and I hope they do, because I don’t like stories where the victims story doesn’t match up. It just makes things more difficult for future victim’s.

    I can understand the police not wanting to do their job, but hospitals have to protect themselves from lawsuits, and that’s why I am skeptical.