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In "The End", Who's Responsible?

A contest that has been performed thousands of times over the years with no ill effects, resulted in the unfortunate death of a listener.

Really? Can you name me one instance of this contest being run elsewhere, using the same methodology? Can you name me five? That should be easy if it has been run "thousands of times".

Again...prior to this event. There is no documented case of an otherwise normal healthy adult, who did not engage in either forced ingestion, or physically strenuous behavior, dying from this.

Perhaps you should do a little more research:

http://www.merck.com/mmhe/sec12/ch158/ch158c.html

http://www.merck.com/mmhe/sec12/ch155/ch155k.html#sec12-ch155-ch155k-345

http://kidneydiseases.about.com/od/kidneydiseases/a/h2ointoxication.htm

There are also documented instances of fatal water intoxication by people trying to dilute their urine prior to a drug test at work or in the military:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=12053856&itool=iconabstr&query_hl=14&itool=pubmed_docsum

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?itool=abstractplus&db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=abstractplus&list_uids=1984128

I'm no genius, but I was able to find plenty of references that should have red-flagged this contest. They're a little harder to pick out now because there are so many articles added since the death of Mrs. Strange.

BTW, there's not a WikiPedia reference among them.
 
SirRoxalot: I clicked on your reference links. What I understand from these linked articles backs up my opinion.

SirRoxalot said:
From this link:
Usually, drinking large amounts of water does not cause overhydration if the pituitary gland, kidneys, liver, and heart are functioning normally. To exceed the body's ability to excrete water, an adult with normal kidney function would have to drink more than 2 gallons of water a day on a regular basis.(my emphasis)

Overhydration is much more common among people whose kidneys do not excrete urine normally—for example, among people with a disorder of the heart, kidneys, or liver.


SirRoxalot said:
From this link:
Intake of smaller amounts of water—sometimes as little as 1 quart a day—can lead to hyponatremia in people whose kidneys are not functioning normally, such as people with kidney failure. Hyponatremia also often occurs in people with heart failure or cirrhosis. (my emphasis) Excessive chronic loss of fluids, as occurs with chronic diarrhea, can also result in hyponatremia.

SirRoxalot said:
From this link:
When Does Fatal Water Intoxication Tend To Happen?
When somebody dies of water intoxication, it is usually caused by the combination of a very large amount of water (often 5 liters or more) over a relatively short period of time (minutes to hours).


This is a very general explanation, because it does not explain the extra circumstances usually associated, until it outlines these bullet points:


* Excessive Sweating: Some of the most famous cases of water intoxication have involved athletes. They got in trouble because they were losing larges amounts of both water and sodium in their sweat but they were replacing their fluid loses with water only. The use of electrolyte solutions instead of water to prevent dehydration reduces the risk substantially.

* Binge Drinking: There have been at least two reported cases of people dying from binge drinking as part of drinking contests and fraternity hazing. These deaths were completely preventable.

* Drug Use: Water intoxication has occurred in people trying to dilute their urine to pass a drug test. There have been at least two cases of teenagers dying after using ecstasy and then drinking excessive water. Impairment of the kidney’s ability to remove the extra fluid by the drugs (particularly ecstasy) was an important factor in their deaths.

* Other Cases: There have been a number of other cases involving giving the wrong intravenous fluids in the hospital, feeding infants water only by mistake, and excessive consumption of beer.


My point being that in all other cases of water intoxication, which is rare (and death by water intoxication, even more rare) there were these other circumstances that helped contribute to the illness.

SirRoxalot said:
There are also documented instances of fatal water intoxication by people trying to dilute their urine prior to a drug test at work or in the military:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=12053856&itool=iconabstr&query_hl=14&itool=pubmed_docsum

We don't know how much they forced the trainee to drink now do we...plus it was forced...not voluntary.

SirRoxalot said:

Again we do not know how much water was ingested, nor over what period of time. They could have forced the trainees to drink 2 gallons in 10 minutes.

SirRoxalot said:
I'm no genius, but I was able to find plenty of references that should have red-flagged this contest. They're a little harder to pick out now because there are so many articles added since the death of Mrs. Strange.

BTW, there's not a WikiPedia reference among them.

Glad to see you are digging deeper than Wikepedia.
 
I keep hearing the word stupidity and that is an appropriate definition. Stupidity reigned with everyone involved.
While the listener may have been pretty stupid to go along with this stunt,the "brains" behind this..."contest" are really responsible here. Especially when one of the morning show said in response to the claim that the stunt was dangerous,"We don't care,they signed waivers..." What a horrible statement. It really bothers me that so many in the radio biz these days act like listeners aren't human beings. Like we're above them all. Please. A lot of the entertainment world looks at radio as the ghetto of the communications business.
This act has made the industry seem even worse than that.
 
SirRoxalot said:
A contest that has been performed thousands of times over the years with no ill effects, resulted in the unfortunate death of a listener.

Really? Can you name me one instance of this contest being run elsewhere, using the same methodology? CanTh you name me five? That should be easy if it has been run "thousands of times".

I can name you one that I personally conducted. I forced people to drink water until they puked. Last one standing..won tickets to a show. The contestants were all given gallon jugs. They willfully participated. Two puked, and one did not. They weren't allowed to leave the studio. And it went on for about two hours. Oh, and guess what? Nobody in management signed off on it because it was such a benign contest, there was no cause for concern. We did no pre-research, and nobody died. And I wish I had documented cases to present to you. But you're nitpicking now. This is a well-known contest, and I'm sure there are five other readers of this forum who could cite several examples they know of as well.

SirRoxalot said:
Again...prior to this event. ere is no documented case of an otherwise normal healthy adult, who did not engage in either forced ingestion, or physically strenuous behavior, dying from this.

Perhaps you should do a little more research:

http://www.merck.com/mmhe/sec12/ch158/ch158c.html

The above references organs functioning incorrectly, and disease. My contention is again "no documented case of an otherwise normal healthy adult, who did not engage in either forced ingestion, or physically strenuous behavior, dying from this. Your link does not prove otherwise.

SirRoxalot said:


Again referencing kidney disease and anomalies in a person's physiology. You appear to be missing something in what I'm saying.

SirRoxalot said:

Not here either.

SirRoxalot said:

What am I not making clear? Again, my intention is not to attack you personally. I'm just not seeing anything that refutes my original position. There's nothing out there that could have shown any reason for the hosts to not conduct this contest under the conditions that they executed under. The evidence isn't there because this hasn't happened to a normal, healthy adult. Please show me otherwise.

SirRoxalot said:

All of these cases involve either a conscious decision to try to fool with the body's natural filtering procedures, or organ failure/disease. It's not the same argument. If anything they are damning to the woman's deliberate choice not to eliminate, and place responsibility upon her.

None of them apply here. I'm sorry if it seems like I'm unsympathetic to the woman's death. That's not the case. I'm merely reinforcing my position that this does not just happen to healthy adults. You still have not shown otherwise. All cases are a result of disease or human decision. That includes overexercise. I wish there were cases to defend your position. But, they're just not there.

SirRoxalot said:
I'm no genius, but I was able to find plenty of references that should have red-flagged this contest. They're a little harder to pick out now because there are so many articles added since the death of Mrs. Strange.

No you really haven't. You've shown that this possibility exists. But none of your citations apply in this instance and wouldn't preclude anyone from engaging in this particular contest.
 
"The Possibility Exists"

You've shown that this possibility exists. But none of your citations apply in this instance and wouldn't preclude anyone from engaging in this particular contest.

Perhaps you missed the part from the Kidney Diseases website:

Every now and then there is a report in the news about someone dying of water intoxication. It usually gets a lot of attention because the headlines are so shocking. How is it that drinking water killed someone, especially when they are so young and healthy! What is worse, it seems to fly in the face of conventional wisdom that you need to be drinking more water not less.

What Is Water Intoxication?
Water intoxication is a condition where the body’s level of sodium has been rapidly diluted with too much water. It is also known as hyponatremia or hyperhydration. Sodium is an important electrolyte that helps regulates the body’s fluids. When the body’s sodium level is changed rapidly by drinking a lot of water, the extra water then causes the cells in the body to swell and malfunction.


If that isn't a red flag, I don't know what is.

YOU'VE conducted a contest where people drank a gallon of water, and it made 2 of 3 contestants puke - an indication to any rational person that it's something that is bad for the body. PUKING is an indication that the conduct is NOT benign. Well, your buds at "The End" more than doubled the amount of water, and weren't as lucky as you. Someone DID die. And, the ONE contest that you cite hardly adds up to "thousands".

I have already cited several sources in previous posts that indicated that the amount of water, the time taken to consume it, and the relative body mass of the individual are critical to determining the effect on a person. Strenuous exercise is not required, but can be a contributing factor in that there are documented cases of people overhydrating during exercise. There are also cases of people overhydrating due to extremely hot weather.

The cases cited of people consuming large amounts of water in order to beat a drug test, and dieing as a result, should also raise a red flag among people taking reasonable care to protect contestants.

You've shown that this possibility exists.

That should be enough to either stop your from running this contest, or at least seek competent medical advice before running a contest requiring people to consume gallons of water in a short period of time. Several cases cited - including the people trying to beat drug tests - refute your contention that there is "no documented case of an otherwise normal healthy adult, who did not engage in either forced ingestion, or physically strenuous behavior, dying from this."

The bottom line is that station personnel apparently did no research, even though they were aware of a condition called "water intoxication" that could be fatal. In fact, they reassured contestants of that the contest might make them uncomfortable, but wouldn't really hurt them. They provided no competent medical staff to evaluate contestants before, during, or after the contest. They did not disclose to contestants the possibility that they could die from participating.

I'm sorry if the people that did this are your buds, but this is not an accident. This is negligence. They screwed up, and they're liable.

PS - You might want to research YOUR next contest before you run it.
 
Anybody thought why we, as radio people, tend to stoop to such stupid levels to attract people for what was a pretty good giveaway in the 1st place? How is it that our listeners want abuse and we respond to it. Are we all just a bunch of sadists? I actually like the people that listen to my show...except for the sales ass hats that work for them/me/us. Well?
 
SirRoxalot,

It still amazes me that you can't say that the constestant is at fault. Apparently in your world it's always somebody else's fault.

Yes I think the station bears some responsibilty!!! Not very much!
 
Re: "The Possibility Exists"

SirRoxalot said:
You've shown that this possibility exists. But none of your citations apply in this instance and wouldn't preclude anyone from engaging in this particular contest.

Perhaps you missed the part from the Kidney Diseases website:

Every now and then there is a report in the news about someone dying of water intoxication. It usually gets a lot of attention because the headlines are so shocking. How is it that drinking water killed someone, especially when they are so young and healthy! What is worse, it seems to fly in the face of conventional wisdom that you need to be drinking more water not less.

What Is Water Intoxication?
Water intoxication is a condition where the body’s level of sodium has been rapidly diluted with too much water. It is also known as hyponatremia or hyperhydration. Sodium is an important electrolyte that helps regulates the body’s fluids. When the body’s sodium level is changed rapidly by drinking a lot of water, the extra water then causes the cells in the body to swell and malfunction.


If that isn't a red flag, I don't know what is.

Again. There no documented case of it happening to a normal healthy adult. And you're on a kidney disease website. It wouldn't be a red flag in this case.

SirRoxalot said:
YOU'VE conducted a contest where people drank a gallon of water, and it made 2 of 3 contestants puke - an indication to any rational person that it's something that is bad for the body. PUKING is an indication that the conduct is NOT benign. Well, your buds at "The End" more than doubled the amount of water, and weren't as lucky as you. Someone DID die. And, the ONE contest that you cite hardly adds up to "thousands".

Again. The contest is well known. Drink 'til you puke/pee contest are old hat. They have been done forever with no major health issue resulting from participation. Yes, vomiting is a red flag, and yes it's involuntary, and yes it happened in my contest. It was also a contest where people voluntarily and willfully participated. In fact, they were proud to have puked. Just as the woman in this instance bragged that she could go on, and challenged the hosts to let her do so.

SirRoxalot said:
I have already cited several sources in previous posts that indicated that the amount of water, the time taken to consume it, and the relative body mass of the individual are critical to determining the effect on a person. Strenuous exercise is not required, but can be a contributing factor in that there are documented cases of people overhydrating during exercise. There are also cases of people overhydrating due to extremely hot weather.

The cases cited of people consuming large amounts of water in order to beat a drug test, and dieing as a result, should also raise a red flag among people taking reasonable care to protect contestants.

But you have yet to show me any case of an otherwise normal, healthy adult who has died from this prior to this contest. You seem unwilling to accept that this was an accident. You've shown multiple definitions of water intoxication. But not one reference case that would warn anyone of good physical health not to participate in this contest. It appears that you cannot accept that there's no information out there that applies to this event that would have precluded the hosts from executing it. You also seem to ignore the incorrect information provided by the much-cited "nurse" who called, that encouraged the hosts to continue the game. And the participant's willingness to continue.

SirRoxalot said:
You've shown that this possibility exists.

That should be enough to either stop your from running this contest, or at least seek competent medical advice before running a contest requiring people to consume gallons of water in a short period of time. Several cases cited - including the people trying to beat drug tests - refute your contention that there is "no documented case of an otherwise normal healthy adult, who did not engage in either forced ingestion, or physically strenuous behavior, dying from this."

Is voluntarily overdrinking water to dilute your bloodstream in order to beat a drug test not "forced ingestion?"

SirRoxalot said:
The bottom line is that station personnel apparently did no research, even though they were aware of a condition called "water intoxication" that could be fatal. In fact, they reassured contestants of that the contest might make them uncomfortable, but wouldn't really hurt them. They provided no competent medical staff to evaluate contestants before, during, or after the contest. They did not disclose to contestants the possibility that they could die from participating.

To which I retort..There was no information out there for them to have drawn this conclusion even were they have done the research you demand.

SirRoxalot said:
I'm sorry if the people that did this are your buds, but this is not an accident. This is negligence. They screwed up, and they're liable.

I respectfully, but wholeheartedly disagree. They provided an evironment conducive to personal injury. Yes. That happened. But the participants made their own decision to engage in the potentially dangerous behavior. At some point, adults must be held accountable for their own decisions. It will never happen. Especially in the state of California. Using your logic, we should sue the auto makers for every accident that happens during rush hour. Or, sue the gun manufacturers for every shooting that takes place.

Radio stations are not responsible for the actions of their listeners. Sorry. We're not babysitters. There's no evidence that this contest would have resulted in its outcome. There was documented danger in overconsumption of water. But none of those circumstances existed in this controlled setting. You have repeatedly failed to show otherwise. The hosts are guilty of stupidity, but nobody made the woman participate. And she was more than willing to ignore warnings and bragged about being able to continue. Those are hardly the actions of a woman in distress.

And...we don't know what behavior she engaged in from the time she left the station until when her body was found. In a court of law...that would be "reasonable doubt." And some lawyer would raise it immediately. She could've engaged in any one the multiple behaviors you cited in your many references that could cause this to happen. Maybe she went to the gym to work out? Or, pehaps she went tanning? Does the woman do drugs? We don't know. I'm not trying to smear her at all. I'm pointing out that there's enough "reasonable doubt" to exonerate the hosts of any criminal behavior. There are reasons why she would have died, but, none of those behaviors were present when she willingly participated, and left the station in otherwise good health. The one behavior that would have contributed to it, was her voluntary denial of the body's natural filtering process of unrination. She was asked if she was OK, she said she was OK, and had an EMT asked the same thing, she'd have responded the same way and she'd have been allowed to leave, and the ambulance company would be a co-defendant in this case.

You cite the "bottom line"...Here's my interpretation:

A tragic accidental death during a radio contest.

That's my opinion. I've done enough research on the subject to stand by it as the available evidence supports my theory. Until I hear definitive data that would refute it, it will be unchanged.

My continued sympathy to all, involved in this tragedy.
 
Final Word

I think that we have come to the point where I will invoke the wisdom passed down by my dear departed mother:

1) None are so blind as those who will not see.

2) You can't argue with a fool.
 
Re: Final Word

SirRoxalot said:
I think that we have come to the point where I will invoke the wisdom passed down by my dear departed mother:

1) None are so blind as those who will not see.

2) You can't argue with a fool.

Name-calling serves nobody.

Thanks for trying to keep this professional.
 
Neanderpaul said:
The above references organs functioning incorrectly, and disease. My contention is again "no documented case of an otherwise normal healthy adult, who did not engage in either forced ingestion, or physically strenuous behavior, dying from this. Your link does not prove otherwise.

There's a bigger point here Paul, and that is whether there is a documented case of this happening before or not, medical knowledge tells us that it is POSSIBLE. And because it is POSSIBLE, the station should have had either a medical staff on standby or not have run the contest.

I can't find a documented case of someone stabbing themselves in the chest over and over again with a spork and killing themselves...but I know that doing that isn't good for me, and it's possible I could kill myself.

Because we know that death from water intoxication is POSSIBLE, both the radio station and Mrs. Strange are responsible. And as a previous poster said, the only issue now is how responsible were they, and what level of responsibility should they be held accountable for?
 
godofirony said:
Neanderpaul said:
The above references organs functioning incorrectly, and disease. My contention is again "no documented case of an otherwise normal healthy adult, who did not engage in either forced ingestion, or physically strenuous behavior, dying from this. Your link does not prove otherwise.

There's a bigger point here Paul, and that is whether there is a documented case of this happening before or not, medical knowledge tells us that it is POSSIBLE. And because it is POSSIBLE, the station should have had either a medical staff on standby or not have run the contest.

I can't find a documented case of someone stabbing themselves in the chest over and over again with a spork and killing themselves...but I know that doing that isn't good for me, and it's possible I could kill myself.

Because we know that death from water intoxication is POSSIBLE, both the radio station and Mrs. Strange are responsible. And as a previous poster said, the only issue now is how responsible were they, and what level of responsibility should they be held accountable for?

I certainly don't deny that the contest lacked complete protection from all possible scenarios.

But, some are claiming criminal negligence and calling for license revocation due to an unfortunate accident. I'm just saying that there exists the possibility for someone to die while standing in a radio studio. Should we not allow them inside? There exists the possiblity that someone could get hit by a car crossing the street to go to a station event. Should we cancel all station events? And those who call for the license to be revoked need to also consider how much fundraising that station does. This one event, tragic as it is, shouldn't shut down an entity that is responsible for so much accumulated good in the community. Statistically, everything in life is dangerous. It's a matter of what is the overall liklihood of danger.

The statistical potential for this outcome was so minute, that nobody could have forseen the results. And those who charge that the hosts did no research need to understand that there wouldn't have been data to show that this was potentially the result. The available data does not show a liklihood that a healthy adult, who doesn't engage in strenuous physical activity, have organ failure, consume chemicals, or make a conscious effort to screw with the body's natural defense mechanism would die participating in a contest such as this. Was there a remote chance that someone could suffer water intoxication? Yes. But realistically dangerous enough to call it off? Unlikely. And even still, personal responsibility for one's actions should outweigh any advice given by anyone. Medical professional, or not. I believe that an EMT would've asked the woman if she were OK, and take her at her word. She was fully aware of how she felt and indicated that she was OK and challenged the hosts to let her continue. The hosts did not attempt to exploit her any further. We have to be able to take people at their word. Even if a medical professional were on site, the woman indicated that she was OK...At what point do we accept an individual's assessment of their own well-being?

It was a bad bit to begin with in my opinion. I have had people inquire multiple times if I would've allowed it, or done the bit. Probably not. But if I were...

Here's how I would've done it:

Get them in to drink orange juice, or pineapple juice..something smelly. Because they're going to wear diapers for two hours. And yes...disgusting as it may seem, they're going to eliminate in those diapers, and at the end of the prescribed time, we're going to ask them to remove the diapers and weigh them. He/she whose diaper weighs the most, wins. No medical danger. Plenty of potential entertainment at the contestant's expense. Disgusting and in poor taste. But, welcome to the culture of Rock Radio in 2007. Of course the bit would've been redlighted by my current PD. Not because of any health hazard, but because it deals with human excremental functions and the FCC frowns upon poopy humor. It could've been done. The on-air execution would have to have been delicate. But it could've been pulled off. I don't know if I would've really done it. But, that would've been my idea.

Digression aside...

I understand that there's probably going to be a huge civil payout made. I accept that as the culture of America. But, I don't agree with the notion that people should be charged, or licenses revoked due to an unforseeable accident. Especially when consensual participation is involved.

Thanks for discussing.
 
Neanderpaul-
Your observations are very on target from my perspective.

This type of contest has happened as part of many fraternal hazing rituals and radio station contests. I suspect that many who have executed this contest believed the 'water intoxication' threat to be an urban myth.

Does anyone really think that Jennifer or the radio staffers really believed that this would end up the way it did? I doubt it.
Should everyone who has executed this contest researched it further? Absolutely
Will this be a wake up call to radio stations and fraternities executing other stunts? Absolutely
Tragic? Absolutely
Criminal negligence? Absurd
Licence revokation? Absurd
 
Neanderpaul said:
Here's how I would've done it:

Get them in to drink orange juice, or pineapple juice..something smelly. Because they're going to wear diapers for two hours. And yes...disgusting as it may seem, they're going to eliminate in those diapers, and at the end of the prescribed time, we're going to ask them to remove the diapers and weigh them. He/she whose diaper weighs the most, wins. No medical danger. Plenty of potential entertainment at the contestant's expense. Disgusting and in poor taste. But, welcome to the culture of Rock Radio in 2007. Of course the bit would've been redlighted by my current PD. Not because of any health hazard, but because it deals with human excremental functions and the FCC frowns upon poopy humor. It could've been done. The on-air execution would have to have been delicate. But it could've been pulled off. I don't know if I would've really done it. But, that would've been my idea.

Would you have medical staff on standby?

How much orange juice? Did you know that ingesting large amounts of orange juice can cause other significant medical problems? Even have horrible interactions with certain medications?

I'm not sure if their license should be revoked or not...but SOMETHING has to be done to make radio stations be more careful about what they're doing.

If nothing else, they should at least have CYA'ed a bit better. It's unfortunate that we have to assume that we're living in a litigious world...but its a reality that must be addressed if radio is going to survive. As of right now..its not lookin so good.
 
godofirony said:
Would you have medical staff on standby?

How much orange juice? Did you know that ingesting large amounts of orange juice can cause other significant medical problems? Even have horrible interactions with certain medications?

I'm not sure if their license should be revoked or not...but SOMETHING has to be done to make radio stations be more careful about what they're doing.

If nothing else, they should at least have CYA'ed a bit better. It's unfortunate that we have to assume that we're living in a litigious world...but its a reality that must be addressed if radio is going to survive. As of right now..its not lookin so good.

I get what you're saying. But, just from the nature of this contest, I do not htink it should have ever been approved, OJ or no OJ, medical personell or no medical personell standing by.....

Let's look at another example. Except this contest is OK, imo. A promotion is done where the last person standing with their hand on a automobile, wins the automobile. They can take restroom breaks, and can drink and eat, but outside the restroom breaks, they have to remain standing (not leaning), with one hand on the car.

Now, if a contestant, for whatever reason known or unknown, passes out, and hits their head or something, then I think that neither a jury or a officer of the law would hold the promoters of this contest liable. That is what I think.

But, to me, that contest is sooooo different than the Hold Your Pee Contest, in so many ways. It's just so obvious to me, that the Hold Your Pee Contest should NEVER have been Allowed to go forword. There is a line of discrection, and it was crossed, and that is what the Jury will be looking at as well.

It's time to reign in these corporate cash cows. I've had all of the "entertainment" from them that would ever care to see...
 
TheRover said:
Now, if a contestant, for whatever reason known or unknown, passes out, and hits their head or something, then I think that neither a jury or a officer of the law would hold the promoters of this contest liable. That is what I think.

Exactly. The difference is proof of negligence. That damning aircheck of Lukas acknowledging the danger of their contest is the difference between Mrs. Strange's death, and a "stick your hand on this car" promo death.

The same reason that we wont "stop people from crossing the street to the radio station for fear they might get hit by a car". Negligence.

But of course I'm not a lawyer...yet ;D
 
I think the context in which they "admit the dangers" needs to be taken into account. IMO they weren't making a true acknowledgment anymore than I am acknowledging that I might get into an accident on the way home tonight. Possible? Yes, you could say so. Likely? No. I know the dangers of driving, that there may be a drunk driver or teen driver with little experience out there that I could tangle with. I can sit here and joke about it light heartedly...(haha, yeah I might have an accident on my way home, BUT I'm insured, so it doesn't matter)...And irony of all ironies...I end up in an accident. Am I careless, or irresponsible because I have joked about it? Am I more guilty because I said I am insured, and said it wouldn't matter if I had an accident.

Why can't you understand that they HONESTLY, WITH EVERY OUNCE OF THEIR BEING, did not BELIEVE ANYONE would die BECAUSE in ALL the research there is no ABSOLUTE EVIDENCE of ANYONE who was a "healthy" adult, and WAS NOT exerting them self in any way that would cause the electrolytes to become imbalanced due to a loss of sodium through sweating, then dieing from it (which is the "common" reason for loss of life when water intoxication happens ~ which is rare to begin with.).

This is not an open and shut case. Even with the LITTLE information available on "death by water intoxication", there are many other factors that become part of the equation, such as: was Mrs Strange on medicines, what did she do after she left, did she have any other illness, known or not (the paperwork from the Strange's attorney to the FCC says she was healthy, what will the autopsy say? Lawyers shouldn't play doctor any more than we should play Lawyer).

I am with Neanderpaul on the fact that the station has done so much good for the community. It is tragic that a life was lost, but that does not make them bad. Bad judgments are made all the time in life. If you do not take proper precaution ONE time when taking to the roads, and you hit and kill someone, does that make you a bad person? Are there consequences, yes, but you are not suddenly a BAD person. Do they take your car away?

Thoughts to ponder as the FCC gears up to investigate...
 
there are many other factors that become part of the equation, such as: was Mrs Strange on medicines, what did she do after she left, did she have any other illness, known or not

Did the hosts or station personnel ask that?

If not, why not?

If they didn't ask, doesn't that weigh in FAVOR of a breach of their duty of oridinary reasonable care? A reasonable person would ask these things. From what we know, the station and hosts didn't.

That's pretty important right there.
 
Johnny Morgan said:
there are many other factors that become part of the equation, such as: was Mrs Strange on medicines, what did she do after she left, did she have any other illness, known or not

Did the hosts or station personnel ask that?

If not, why not?

If they didn't ask, doesn't that weigh in FAVOR of a breach of their duty of oridinary reasonable care? A reasonable person would ask these things. From what we know, the station and hosts didn't.

That's pretty important right there.

My position is that the station was irresponsible for not having a health care professional on site, before, during and after. So I agree with you. But I also believe if a person knows they are not not healthy for such an activity, they shouldn't participate irregardless of whether a health care professional is there. And she should have known her own limits and not tried to exceed them for a $250 video game!

If she truly was healthy, from the research I have done, the odds of her dieing are staggeringly minuscule, practically zero. There are no records online of someone healthy , (and not exerting them self to where they are sweating, which helps cause water intoxication because of the imbalance in one's electrolytes), dieing from water intoxication.

So, because she did die, we are led to believe that she was either on meds (ex: a diuretic), or had a health issue (ex: a urinary tract infection), or she did something after she left which was unhealthy for the condition she was in (took some pepto or an aspirin to ease the discomfort). But that is gathered from very little information; we don't know her health situation or what she did. Also, one has to consider that she apparently worked in a medical office. She had resources at her finger tips for EXPERT opinion prior to entering the contest...

I plan on interviewing someone in the health care industry, a true expert on the matter on my on show. I'll post the audio. It may be a couple days as we are still researching to see who is the best qualified that we can get. I think what we will learn is that it is possible to die for ANY reason.
 
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