The Discovery

 

 

Review the following case:
Part I—The Discovery
Cast of Characters
Sam Garrison—Detective
Roma and Clint Underhill—The hot couple
Kavita Dickson and Larry Gonzales—emt paramedics
Renee Volenbach—Physiologist in the Biology Department at Noletown University
Friday, 7PM
Roma and Clint Underhill had both had a long day. They were the owners of a successful real estate company in Desert Palm. Each had several clients, and the strain of the current real estate market was getting to them. It had been an unusually cool day for January, with temperatures hovering around 60 degrees. On coming home they decided to relax in their hot tub with some wine. While Roma changed from her work clothes, Clint said that he would join her in the hot tub after he took his Lasix.

Saturday, 8AM
“911… Please state your emergency.” “Oh, Oh, I… I… ”

“Ma’am, please calm down and tell me the address.”

“I think…, yes, OK, it’s… it’s 1223 Oak Creek Drive.” “What is the problem, please?”

“I’m the maid for Mr. and Mrs. Underhill and… and I didn’t find them in the house when I came in this morning, so I looked around outside. I just found them in their hot tub out back. They are under the water. Please come, please come now!”

“Yes, ma’am, I’m alerting the EMTs and an ambulance will be on the way. Please go out front and wait, so the paramedics can find the address quickly.”

Saturday, 8:10AM
Paramedics Kavita Dickson and Larry Gonzales brought the ambulance to a stop at the end of a long driveway next to an impressive two-story mansion. The maid was on the front steps and quickly directed them to the back patio where the hot tub could be seen.

Empty bottles of wine were on the ledge surrounding the hot tub. Kavita quickly climbed up the steps and saw the bodies of the Underhills on the bottom of the hot tub. As she got into the water, she exclaimed, “This water seems really hot. Let’s see if we can get them out.” Larry climbed in after her and together they dragged the bodies out of the hot tub and onto the patio. It was obvious that both had been dead for some time. Kavita called the dispatcher.

“Listen, Linda, this hot tub case is a DOA, but something is not right. How about sending the medical examiner and a detective out to look the situation over. Tell them to bring a thermometer!”

Part II—The Investigation
Saturday, 9:30AM
“115 degrees! What is this thing doing so hot?” Sam Garrison asked Kavita as he removed the thermometer from the water.

He was investigating the death of Roma and Clint Underhill, prominent real estate brokers in Desert Palm. “This hot tub should be no more than 109 degrees.”

He remembered reading a Consumer Product Safety Commission flyer on hot tubs and wondered if the tub was associated with the death. The bodies were being taken away for autopsy as he took in the scene.

“Hmm. What about these bottles of wine? It looks like they had a party—all by themselves! The medical examiner will check their blood alcohol level (bal, or blood alcohol concentration—bac) and we’ll be able to see his complete report on Monday. We may even be able to determine their cause of death with that information. I’ll ask the maid about any medications.”

He went into the sunroom off of the patio to where the maid was being consoled by another officer. “Ma’am, can you tell me if the Underhills were taking any medicine?”

“Well, sir, I know he was complaining about having to use the bathroom a lot since he returned from the doctor’s office about two weeks ago. You might look in the cabinet over the sink where they keep aspirin and such.”

Sam looked where she indicated and found a recently filled bottle of Lasix.

Monday Afternoon
Monday afternoon, the medical examiner phoned Sam with the following information:

bal (Blood Alcohol) of the couple was .20
Roma weighed 120 lbs; Clint weighed 160 lbs
Time of death estimated at 2am Saturday morning
There was a therapeutic level of Lasix in Mr. Underhill’s blood, but none in Mrs. Underhill’s blood

Part III—The Final Report
Later Monday Afternoon
Detective Garrison returned to police headquarters and, after reading the medical examiner’s complete report, began the process of writing his own explanation of what happened to the Underhills. As he wrote, he thought about all that had happened and began to wonder about the physiology associated with the couple’s death. The level of alcohol found by the medical examiner was high but was not necessarily sufficient to cause their death, but was it a contributing factor?

 

Please discuss this case. Feel free to post more than once. You should post at the minimum answers to 2 of the following questions along with 1 response to another student’s post. Posts need to be at least 200 words in length.

You must first post your answer before you will be allowed to view other posts.

What were the specific effects of the Lasix, hot water, and alcohol on the couple’s blood pressure?
Describe 2 mechanisms by which the body would compensate for a falling blood pressure.
Describe several procedures that might have helped save the couple if they had been found unconscious with their heads still above water and alive.

Sample Solution

e topic of a female’s job in a general public is investigated in numerous ways in Othello. Through the eyes of Emilia, we see imbalances in marriage and ladies’ own impression of men. Emilia offers an interpretation of marriage and relations of sexual orientations that would have been genuinely in front of Shakespeare’s times in Act IV, Scene 3. In this scene, Emilia and Desdemona are talking in Desdemona’s room after she was requested by Othello to quickly go to her chambers. Like a respectful kid hanging tight for discipline, Desdemona gets in line. After she gullibly communicates her skepticism over a chance of a lady betraying her better half, Emilia offers her an alternate perspective and bands her speech with hints that Desdemona ought not simply docilely take all the abuse that Othello doles out at her.

Emilia contends that ladies are equivalent to men and that they have similar purposes behind being faithless. Very much like men, ladies have shortcomings, wants, improper kind gestures that lead them to this despicable demonstration of disloyalty. Her words not the slightest bit advocate for disloyalty, yet rather advocate for bringing issues to light that ladies are the same than men with regards to committing errors driven by the craving for “sport,” the straightforward sexual longing for pleasure. This discourse makes the differentiation among Emilia and Desdemona’s way to deal with marriage exceptionally clear. Contrasted with Desdemona who is a heartfelt that has an ideal, monumentalized form of affection and marriage that she places regardless of anything else, Emilia perceives that there is a twofold norm around orientation and constancy and she is searching for a sensible center ground. Emilia proposes that the “evil” a lady does is a reaction to being violated by a man.

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