MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Symptoms
Episode Date: October 19, 2023Today’s podcast features 3 medical horror stories. The audio for all three stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel and has been remastered for today's episode.Story names, pre...views & links to original YouTube videos:#3 -- "Green Needles" -- Man goes to the ER with extreme chest pains (Original YouTube link -- https://youtu.be/auz4tq50xZ0?t=1000)#2 -- "Midnight Stroll" -- The idea that this ACTUALLY happens to people is truly terrifying, both for them and for the people around them (Original YouTube link -- https://youtu.be/fLs9za4X08E?t=787)#1 -- "Trauma Room 1" -- A woman arrives at a hospital, seconds later it was evacuated (Original YouTube link -- https://youtu.be/7gFlFR1NBFE?t=727)For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Today's podcast features three medical horror stories.
The audio from all three of these stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel
and has been remastered for today's episode.
The links to the original YouTube videos are in the description.
The first story you'll hear is called Green Needles,
and it's about a man who went to the emergency room with extreme chest pains.
The second story you'll hear is called Midnight Stroll,
and the idea that this actually happens to people is truly terrifying,
both for them and the people near them.
And the third and final story you'll hear is called Trauma Room 1,
and it's about a woman who arrived at a hospital,
and just seconds later, the entire hospital was evacuated.
But before we get into today's stories,
if you're a fan of the strange, dark, and mysterious delivered in story format,
then you've come to the right podcast, because that's all we do,
and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday.
So, if that's of interest to you, please sneak in to the Amazon Music Follow Buttons house, Okay, let's get into our first story called Green Needles. Hello, I'm Emily and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And they don't get much bigger than the man who made badminton sexy.
OK, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks,
you know who I'm talking about.
No?
Short shorts?
Free cocktails?
Careless whispers?
OK, last one.
It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right.
It's Stone Cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet, join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for
Freedom. From the outside, it looks like he has it all, but behind the trademark dark sunglasses
is a man in turmoil. George is trapped in a lie of his own making, with a secret he feels would ruin him if the truth ever came out.
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to your podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wanderie Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wanderie app.
I'm Peter Frank-O'Pern.
And I'm Afua Hirsch.
And we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy,
covering the iconic, troubled musical genius that was Nina Simone.
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me.
Nina Simone, one of my favourite artists of all time.
Somebody who's had a huge impact on me,
who I think objectively stands apart for the level of her talent,
the audacity of her message.
If I was a first year at university, the first time I sat down and really listened to her
and engaged with her message, it totally floored me.
And the truth and pain and messiness of her struggle, that's all captured in unforgettable
music that has stood the test of time.
Do you think that's fair, Peter?
I mean, the way in which her music comes across is so powerful,
no matter what song it is.
So join us on Legacy for Nina Simone.
A 28-year-old Russian man namedom Sidorkin started having severe chest pains.
And at first, he tried to ignore it, but it got so bad he could barely stand up.
And then he began coughing up blood.
And so finally, he went to the emergency room.
When he got there, even before the doctors examined him or gave him an x-ray, just based
on the way he presented to them, being pale in the face and hunched over and very sick-looking,
they assumed this must be something very serious. So that day, they brought Mr. Sudorkin in for an
examination, and after talking to him and hearing about all of his symptoms and just looking at him,
the assumption was he probably has a tumor in his lungs.
And so they sent him in for an x-ray, and afterwards, the radiologist looked at the x-ray and confirmed that, yep, there is a mass growing inside of your lungs. And so before they went to
just start removing huge pieces of his lung, they told him that they would like to do a biopsy,
where they remove a small piece of the tissue and test it to see if it's cancerous or not.
And so Mr. Sedorkin is terrified, but he
says, okay. He schedules his surgery. He goes in a couple of days later and the surgeon pulls out a
piece of his lung tissue. And as it's sitting on the tray, he looks down at the tissue, the surgeon
does, and he realizes there is something hidden inside of the tissue, as if the tissue was like
an envelope holding something inside of it. And so he opened it up and there growing on the side of his lung
was a small fir tree. It was five centimeters long. It was green. It looked very lively. It
was just a thriving little tree. The doctors believed Mr. Sedorkin, who was a botanist,
had inhaled a seed of a fir tree and it got lodged inside of his lung tissue. And then as it grew,
its pine needles began piercing his blood capillaries, causing him to cough up blood.
After the discovery of what was inside of his lung,
a spokeswoman for the Royal Botanic Gardens in London
said that it is possible for a seed to germinate
inside of the dark, damp conditions inside of a lung.
But it is unbelievably bizarre.
When doctors informed Mr. Sedorkin
that he did not have cancer, he had a tree,
Mr. Sedorkin was shocked and he said,
"'I never got the sense
"'that there was a tree growing inside of me.'"
But more than shocked,
he was just relieved that he was cancer-free.
There is a picture of this tree inside of his lung tissue,
but it's a bit graphic, so if you wanna see it,
go ahead and Google tree and lung,
and I'm sure you'll find it. Our next story is called Midnight Stroll.
In 1887, 35-year-old Robert LeDrew was a very talented detective working in Paris, France. He was so talented that periodically he would get called upon by other police departments around the country to help them solve their most difficult cases.
difficult cases. And so that year, there was this coastal town in northern France that had the string of sailors that went missing, and nobody had the slightest idea what had happened to them.
And so naturally, Robert was called in to investigate. The night Robert arrived in this
town, it was very late and Robert was tired, so he went straight to his hotel and he went to bed.
The following morning, he got up and he went straight to the local police department to meet the local officers that he would be working with on this investigation.
But when he got there, he was told that the missing sailors case had been lowered in priority because during the night, a murder had been committed down on their beach.
And so that was now their main focus.
And so they apologized to Robert and said, you know, I'm sorry you came all this way for nothing, but since you're here, do you want to help us in this beach murder
investigation? And Robert said, sure. The victim was a middle-aged man named Andre Monet who owned
a dress shop in Paris, France. He had recently moved to this coastal town to enjoy the beautiful
scenery.
When his body was discovered early that morning, it was quickly determined he had been killed by a single gunshot wound to the chest,
where the bullet actually went clear through him out the other side, but they hadn't found the bullet.
There were no suspects, there were no leads, there was no clear motive.
However, they were able to rule out robbery because there was still money in Andre's pockets.
And so Robert and the other local officers left the police station and made their way down to the beach where they began examining the area where Andre had been found. The local officers focused
on looking for the bullet while Robert decided to walk a little ways down the beach to see if
there was any evidence that had been overlooked in the initial search. And after only walking a very short distance, Robert noticed some barely visible
footprints that appeared to pass right by where Andre's body had been found. And these footprints,
they continued past that area and then up a flight of stairs up onto the road where they disappeared.
Robert called over the other officers and told them to make plaster casts of these footprints so he could
analyze them. What that meant is the officers would literally just pour liquid plaster inside
of these prints, and then when they dried, they would pull that plaster out, and it would literally
be a 3D model of the foot that had made the prints. And so as the officers are working on
these casts, Robert says to one of the officers that these prints
looked really odd to him, like they were familiar in some way, but he just couldn't place where he
had seen them before. Less than an hour later, when the plaster had dried, the officers pulled
them out and they handed them to Robert, and as soon as Robert looked at them, he physically
reacted to what he was seeing. It was like he was disappointed. And then without saying anything,
he just walked down the beach with these plaster casts until he got to the secluded area where he
sat down. And he sat there for hours and hours, just staring at the plaster casts, seemingly
unaffected by the sun that was blazing down on him the whole time and the tide that was very quickly
creeping up on him. The local officers who were watching this,
they didn't know anything about Robert.
All they knew is his reputation,
which is he is this totally legendary detective.
And so they didn't dare question his methods,
even though this seemed really odd what he was doing.
Finally, by mid-afternoon, Robert Wood put the cask down,
he would stand up and he would walk back over to the mystified local officers.
And when he walked up to them, he would say, there's no reason to stay at the beach any longer or
interview any more witnesses. I think I've solved the case. But then instead of elaborating, he just
turned around and walked up off the beach and headed back for his hotel. The local officers
just looked at each other and shrugged, and they left too.
Early the next day, the bullet that had killed Andre Monet was found on the beach.
And so when Robert showed up to the beach, the chief of police handed him this bullet in an effort to help him continue the investigation.
And as soon as Robert looked at it, he sighed and said, OK, now I know for sure what happened.
And then Robert proceeded to break down the murder.
He said the killer woke up in the middle of the night on the night that Andre was killed
and he got out of his bed, he put on his clothes
and then he headed down to the beach.
There, he encountered Andre Monet,
a man he didn't know who was most likely out
for a midnight stroll as well.
The two men
struck up a friendly conversation, but at some point it turned into some sort of quarrel, at
which point the killer drew his pistol, shot Andre in the chest, and then fled the scene.
Robert told the local police chief that the reason he knew all these details
is because he had been the killer. He killed Andre Monet.
details is because he had been the killer. He killed Andre Monet. But he didn't do it on purpose and he didn't remember because he killed Andre Monet while he was sleepwalking. He told the chief
when he was given those plaster casts of those footprints, he knew immediately why he thought
those prints looked so familiar. Because as soon as he looked at the casts, he could tell whoever
had made the prints was missing a toe. And as it happened, Robert was missing a toe. So those prints looked exactly like
his footprints. And that morning when he had woken up in his hotel room before even going down to the
beach, he had noticed that his shoes and his socks, which were next to his bed, were sandy and damp.
And he thought that was so strange because he couldn't remember how they got that way,
but he was too busy to investigate.
And that night, after he had sat all day looking at the casts and then left the beach,
leaving the local police officers totally mystified,
he had gone back to his room
and the first thing he did
was get his revolver out from under his pillow
and he discovered that one bullet was missing
and he always kept his revolver fully loaded.
And so he spent the rest of the night trying to convince himself
that this was just one big coincidence,
but the following morning when he was given that bullet,
he knew immediately that this was not a coincidence.
The bullet that had killed Andre Monet was the same type of ammunition
that he loaded his revolver with, and so he had to be the killer.
He had
effectively caught himself. The police were totally shocked and did not believe this at first.
More specifically, they didn't want to believe that Robert, their star detective, was behind
this horrible homicide. But eventually, after examining all the evidence, they agreed he had
to be the killer. But to test whether this really was
sleepwalking and not some elaborate cover-up by Robert, they decided to conduct an experiment.
Robert, who was fully cooperative with the investigation, was told to sleep in this jail
cell where he would be monitored 24-7 by armed guards, and in this cell with him would be a
revolver loaded with blank rounds. He was told to keep it under his pillow.
For the first couple of days, nothing happened.
Robert never touched the revolver during the day or when he was asleep.
But about a week into this experiment,
Robert suddenly woke up in the middle of the night in this trance-like state.
He reached under his pillow, pulled out the revolver,
and began firing at the guards right outside of the cell.
And so this convinced the
police that Robert had been telling the truth about what happened to Andre Monet. He really
had killed him while he was sleepwalking. A decision was made not to prosecute Robert for
the murder. Instead, they decided to basically exile him for everybody's protection. And so from
then until 1937, when Robert died,
he was forced to live alone on this secluded farm outside of Paris,
where the only visitors he ever got were doctors
who would only show up during the day and with armed bodyguards.
Hello, I am Alice Levine, and I am one of the hosts of Wondery's podcast, British Scandal.
On our latest series, The Race to Ruin, we tell the story of a British man
who took part in the first ever round-the-world sailing race.
Good on him, I hear you say.
But there is a problem, as there always is in this show.
The man in question hadn't actually sailed before.
Oh, and his boat wasn't seaworthy.
Oh, and also tiny little detail, almost didn't mention it.
He bet his family home on making it to the finish line.
What ensued was one of the most complex cheating plots
in British sporting history.
To find out the full story,
follow British Scandal wherever you listen to podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
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The next and final story of today's episode is called Trauma Room 1.
On the night of February 19, 1994, a man in Southern California called 911 because his girlfriend was struggling to breathe.
When the 911 dispatcher picked up this man's call, he was very distraught and asked them
to please send an ambulance as fast as you possibly can.
But despite how upset this man was on the phone,
he was not actually surprised this situation was unfolding. His girlfriend, 31-year-old Gloria
Ramirez, had been diagnosed with terminal cervical cancer just six weeks earlier,
and the doctors had told her that she likely did not have much time left.
told her that she likely did not have much time left. And making this even more tragic, Gloria had actually gone into the hospital a few years
earlier with symptoms and signs that she likely had cancer, but the doctors missed it.
Had they caught it back then, they likely could have saved her.
Still, after receiving her very grim diagnosis just a few weeks earlier, Gloria had resolved
to fight her cancer as best as she could.
After all, she had a lot to lose.
Gloria had two young kids.
She had a boy and a girl who were 9 and 12 years old, respectively.
And Gloria absolutely adored them and really devoted her life to them.
In the evenings, she would play with them
and help them with their homework, and the whole time she'd be cracking jokes to make them laugh
and smile. And then even when Gloria was not actively parenting her kids, she was always a
very positive presence in their lives. She was optimistic, she was happy, she was upbeat, and
oftentimes she could be found wandering around with a big smile on her face singing a
religious hymn to herself. So when Gloria got this terrible news that she had late-stage cancer,
she was obviously terrified and sad, but she was also very determined to find a way to survive
because she knew her kids still needed her. Around the time Gloria was diagnosed, her doctors told her she would begin
radiation treatment for her cancer at the end of February, so she had a few weeks to wait.
And so during this waiting period, Gloria found herself spending a lot of time researching her
disease, looking for things she could be doing on her own right now to make herself feel better,
or even potentially increase
the odds of her survival. So on February 19th, when Gloria told her boyfriend that she was starting
to have some issues breathing, the boyfriend didn't hesitate for a second to call 911 because
he knew firsthand from living with Gloria that she was desperate to survive and so any changes
in her symptoms needed to be treated like an emergency.
It was around 8 p.m. that night when the ambulance pulled up in front of Gloria's home.
Paramedics climbed out, they rushed over to Gloria, they put her on a stretcher,
they gave her a mask with oxygen, and then they loaded her into the back of the ambulance,
and then seconds later they were flying down the road with their sirens blaring. While they sped toward the hospital in
Riverside, which is a city about an hour east of Los Angeles, one of the paramedics on board the
ambulance called ahead to the Riverside Hospital emergency room to talk to one of the doctors,
and the doctor who answered was a 33-year-old woman
named Dr. Julie Gorchinsky. And she loved her job. She loved the thrill and excitement and challenge
of working in a big city emergency room. And so she takes this call. The paramedics tell her that
they have a patient who has terminal cancer. She's having a hard time breathing. And her heart rate
is becoming very unstable to the point where
if it's not controlled soon, it's going to kill her. And they told Julie they would be there in
about five minutes. So Julie, she hangs up the phone and immediately began preparing for receiving
a critical patient as well as getting trauma room one ready, which is where Gloria would be treated.
Now, as bad as this situation was for Gloria,
for Julie and the other nurses and doctors in this emergency room, this was kind of business as usual. They were used to receiving patients that were in very rough shape. And so as Julie
and the rest of her medical team waited for this ambulance to arrive, none of them were worried
that they wouldn't be able to handle this patient. They thought tonight was going to be as routine as any other night.
However, they would be very, very wrong.
The ambulance ride took about 15 minutes, so they pulled into the Riverside Hospital
right at 8.15 PM.
And as soon as the ambulance came to a stop,
the paramedics jumped out, they ran around to the back, they opened up the back doors,
they pulled Gloria out still on her stretcher, and they pushed her as fast as they could through
the doors into the emergency room. Once inside, Julie and the rest of her team, they took Gloria
and they pushed her left down a hallway into trauma room one.
Once inside, the doctors and nurses immediately noticed that Gloria's heart rate was spiking dramatically and her blood pressure was falling dramatically. So, Julie and her team began
administering a standard set of treatments for someone in this condition. They switched Gloria's
oxygen mask she had been using on the ambulance ride for a more this condition. They switched Gloria's oxygen mask she had been
using on the ambulance ride for a more powerful one. They gave her painkillers, sedatives, and
drugs to help steady her heartbeat. And at first, the treatments seemed to be working because pretty
quickly Gloria's heartbeat began to level out. However, it didn't last. Soon, Gloria's heartbeat
was racing so insanely fast that all of these alarms were going off
on her heartbeat monitor.
Knowing they had to act quickly, Julie and her team began removing Gloria's t-shirt in
order to administer electric shocks to her chest with paddles.
This is a way for doctors to kind of reset a patient's heartbeat.
As the nurses got the electric paddles ready,
they and the rest of the medical team
suddenly noticed two strange things about Gloria.
The first was that Gloria seemed to be emitting
this strange garlicky smell from her mouth.
The second was Gloria's skin looked very greasy.
However, despite the entire medical team taking note
of these two things, no one thought they were significant. Lots of patients suddenly are
brought into the ER, and very rarely do they have a chance to shower or brush their teeth
beforehand, and so they figured that was the reason she looked and smelled that way. Finally,
the big electrical paddles were ready, and so the nurses placed them on either
side of Gloria's heart, and then they began sending powerful bolts of electricity into Gloria's chest.
While the nurses worked on Gloria's heart, other members of the medical team needed to assess
Gloria's overall condition, and so to do that, they needed to draw her blood. So, a nurse took
an alcohol wipe and cleaned a small spot on Gloria's arm.
And then she took a syringe and jabbed it inside of Gloria and began the draw.
And as soon as she did this, trauma room one filled with a new smell.
It was a chemical smell.
And Julie immediately noticed it.
And she looked over at the nurse doing the blood draw.
And she said, I think it smells like ammonia in here. And the nurse who was doing the blood draw kind of scrunched her face up in
disgust and nodded in agreement. The nurse finished the blood draw and then handed the blood vial to
Julie. And as Julie was taking this blood vial from the nurse, she noticed the nurse looked
suddenly very confused and very disoriented. Her eyes were
kind of flickering and she was staring straight ahead like she didn't know where she was. And so
Julie, she sees this in the nurse and then she glances down at this blood vial in her own hand
now and she sees something she's never seen before. The blood inside this vial, Gloria's blood,
was full of these small white crystals.
But before Julie could tell anybody else in the room about these strange crystals in the patient's blood,
the nurse who had done the blood draw went from being dazed and confused to collapsing on the ground.
Luckily, another doctor had seen the nurse starting to collapse and dove out and caught
her right before her head hit the ground.
This collapsed nurse was very quickly placed on a stretcher and wheeled out of trauma room
one so the other doctors and nurses could focus on Gloria, who was obviously dying.
And so Julie, who was still just standing in the middle of this room holding this vial
of blood, was wondering what the heck just happened to her colleague. And she's also looking down at these
crystals thinking, I've never seen this before. What does this mean? And right as she was about
to flag one of the other medical team members over to look at it, Julie began feeling very
nauseous and her head started spinning. And then she felt like she might collapse. And so not
wanting to cause any more distractions for the main team, she quickly
placed this vial of blood on a nearby tray. And then she quickly made her way out of trauma room
one and sat down in a nearby chair. And as soon as she sat down, another staff member at the hospital
who had not been inside of the trauma room ran over to Julie and asked her, you know, hey, are you okay?
And Julie, she looked up at the staff member and she tried to speak, but she couldn't.
And then her eyes rolled back into her skull
and she slumped forward and fell to the ground.
And at the same moment that Julie was collapsing
outside of trauma room one, inside of the trauma room,
there was another thud as another nurse collapsed
and then another and then another. And before long, screams were coming out of trauma room, there was another thud as another nurse collapsed, and then another, and then another.
And before long, screams were coming out of trauma room one as people inside who had not collapsed yet are looking around seeing their colleagues just dropping like flies for no reason.
And so pretty quickly, the call came out over the hospital intercom to evacuate the hospital. The only people that would stay back would be a skeleton crew of doctors and nurses and
Gloria because they felt like moving Gloria outside right now would likely kill her.
We need to save her right now.
Outside the hospital, the parking lot very quickly filled up with doctors and nurses
and other sick people on
stretchers. People were screaming and crying, sirens were blaring, and the medical staff that
was still healthy was running all over the place looking for supplies to help treat their co-workers.
Meanwhile, back inside of trauma room one, things for Gloria only seemed to be getting worse.
The four doctors and nurses who had stayed back continued to administer more drugs,
more shocks to her chest, more oxygen,
but no matter what they did,
her blood pressure continued to fall
and her heartbeat became fainter and fainter and fainter.
Finally, at 8.50 p.m.,
roughly 35 minutes after Gloria had first been wheeled into the
emergency room, she died.
In that 35-minute window, 23 of Riverside Hospital's staff had either collapsed or
become very sick and then collapsed, and many of them had to be hospitalized.
But the most affected person, by far, was Julie. She was in such bad shape by the time she made it out to the parking lot that she was actually put on an ambulance from her hospital and driven
to another hospital where she was admitted to their intensive care unit. And there, a nurse drew her blood, and in it
were little white crystals just like in Gloria's blood.
At 11 p.m. on the same night all this craziness happened, a hazardous materials team dressed in
full hazmat suits entered the Riverside Hospital to look for a chemical leak, because that was the
running theory that some sort of leak had happened in the hospital, it had made its way into Trauma
Room 1, and that's what had caused everyone to collapse and get sick. But despite an extensive
search, the hazmat team did not find any leaks. Stumped, authorities decided to just be extra careful around this hospital and around Gloria's
body until they figured out what had happened, because the fear was there was some sort of
unknown or hidden toxin either in this building or on or in Gloria's body.
Six days after the incident, inside of a special airtight room while wearing full body protective
suits, doctors performed an autopsy on Gloria.
And they discovered there was absolutely nothing toxic inside of her.
In fact, the autopsy only revealed that Gloria had died of natural causes.
Her cancer had caused her heart and her kidneys to fail.
Meanwhile, although the other medical staff members who had gotten sick inside of trauma
room one had mostly recovered, Julie just could not seem to get any better. She had breathing
problems and pancreatitis, which is the inflammation of the pancreas and it's very painful,
pancreatitis, which is the inflammation of the pancreas and it's very painful,
and her bones were literally just starting to die, leaving her in a wheelchair.
Gloria's family blamed Riverside Hospital for Gloria's death, insisting that these toxic fumes that must have been present inside of Trauma Room 1 came from the hospital, and those fumes are responsible for
what happened to the staff, and they are responsible for killing Gloria. And in fact,
three times in the three years leading up to Gloria's death, Riverside Hospital had had some
issues with hazardous materials making their way into the hospital. There was sewer gas that came
in from a drain, there was a toxic gas that was created from
a sterilizer that made two people in the hospital sick, and some of the hospital's water was
found to have algae in it.
But the hospital said, they checked their hospital, there was no leak, we did not cause
whatever toxic fumes were inside of trauma room one, and so we are not responsible for what happened
to our staff or what happened to Gloria. Riverside Hospital would be searched again and again for
some sort of leak. Also, Gloria's home would be searched for toxic gases, and Gloria would be
autopsied two additional times. But no one could find anything toxic anywhere.
So, eventually, California's Department of Human and Health Services came forward and
said they had the answer to what had happened inside of Trauma Room 1.
They said it was mass sociogenic illness.
Mass sociogenic illness is when a group of people all believe they have the
same illness, even though there's nothing wrong with any of them. It's caused by fear and anxiety.
Basically, the state of California was saying that Julie and the other 22 staff members who
had gotten sick and collapsed had just pretended they were making it up. As for Gloria, they said she just died from
her cancer. Now, of course, this explanation made a lot of people unhappy, like Gloria's family,
and of course, Julie, whose medical problems were very well documented. She couldn't walk anymore
because her bones were literally dying. And so, Gloria's family and Julie said, you know what, we think the hospital
is covering something up and we are going to sue. But before they did, an obscure lab located just
outside of San Francisco, California, it was called the Forensic Science Center, was called in to do
yet another investigation into what happened inside of Riverside Hospital and what these
scientists found would make history.
Here is what they discovered.
After Gloria was diagnosed with cancer,
she began researching not only her disease,
but also alternative treatments
that she could do on her own
before she began her radiation treatment
at the end of February.
And according to the scientists of Forensic Science Center,
Gloria must have begun using a well-known controversial home remedy to help with her pain.
It was called dimethyl sulfoxide, or DMSO for short.
In the 1960s, DMSO was prescribed to treat pain and anxiety, but as it became more
popular, it was discovered that it could cause eye damage, and so the government said, you can't use
this anymore. But even though DMSO was no longer available as a medicine, it was still being sold
in gel form inside of hardware stores as a heavy-duty degreaser.
And it was this type of DMSO, the gel form, that Gloria had begun rubbing all over her skin,
head to toe. This was the reason when she arrived in the emergency room, her skin looked greasy
because she was literally covered head to toe in this gel. It was also why her
breath smelled like garlic, because after DMSO is absorbed into your bloodstream, you emit a sort of
garlicky smell both through your pores and out of your mouth. But the discovery that Gloria had been
using DMSO did not account for why all these people in the hospital began collapsing and
falling ill when they were around
her. It turned out on the night that Gloria's boyfriend called 911 because Gloria was suffering
from breathing problems, Gloria was also suffering from another medical issue, but it was so minor,
the boyfriend didn't think to bring it up to the 911 dispatcher or to the paramedics when they
arrived. And this secret
medical condition that Gloria had was a urinary tract infection, which is an infection in any part
of the urinary system. These are very common and usually very easy to treat. But what nobody
realized was that because Gloria had this infection, her body was not flushing out the DMSO chemicals that had seeped
inside of it from all this gel on her skin. Still, even very large amounts of DMSO chemicals inside
of your body or on your skin is not enough to cause any harm to you or people around you.
The danger started when the EMTs in the ambulance put that oxygen mask
on Gloria's face as they transported her to the hospital. Suddenly, there was this new chemical
being introduced into Gloria's body, oxygen. And the scientists from the Forensic Science Center
said this new chemical, oxygen, began interacting with the DMSO chemicals trapped inside of Gloria's body
and together they formed a new chemical. Now, if Gloria had gotten to the hospital and responded
more positively to the treatments and medicines that the doctors and nurses at the ER gave her,
then Julie and the rest of the staff inside of that hospital would never have gotten sick.
For that to happen, for that catastrophe to play out inside of that hospital,
two very specific things had to happen in the correct order. And they did.
First, there was the electric shocks. When the medical team was pumping electrical shocks into Gloria's chest,
the scientists from the Forensic Science Center say those charges of electricity interacted with
that new chemical that had been created inside of Gloria, and it changed this new chemical again.
And this time, the change made the chemical deadly. It became what's known as dimethyl sulfate,
which was used as a chemical weapon in World War I.
Once Gloria received those shocks to her chest,
her body basically became a canister of nerve gas.
And then one of the nurses drew Gloria's blood,
which was the second event that ultimately
set off the catastrophe.
Emergency rooms are typically kept fairly cold, roughly 66 degrees Fahrenheit.
But when this new deadly chemical was created inside of Gloria, it was still inside of her
body where it was warm. And for dimethyl sulfate, when it is warm,
it's unstable and much less dangerous. But when that nurse drew Gloria's blood, inside of the
blood was the deadly chemical, and now it was no longer in Gloria. It was in this cool 66 degree
room, and so it began to stabilize and started producing those little white crystals
inside of the blood vial that Julie saw and as it stabilized it turned into a gas and it filled the
room and the staff began to breathe it in. The scientists from the Forensic Science Center do
not think that this mass poisoning event contributed to Gloria's death, meaning Gloria did really die
from her cancer. Gloria's family has denied that Gloria ever used DMSO, and they still insist that
the hospital was responsible for Gloria's death. The hospital would ultimately pay $800,000 in
settlement money to Gloria's family, but the hospital would never
admit that they did anything wrong. Julie's lawsuit against the hospital was ultimately dismissed,
and her bones never really recovered from the damage that was done to them despite
eight surgeries to try to fix them. However, Julie would eventually go back to being a practicing doctor at another hospital,
and she has said the ordeal she went through inside of Trauma Room 1 at Riverside Hospital
actually made her a better doctor. Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin podcast.
If you enjoyed today's stories,
be sure to check out our YouTube channel,
which is just called Mr. Ballin,
where we have hundreds more stories just like this one,
but many of them are not available on this podcast.
They're only on YouTube.
Again, the YouTube channel is just called Mr. Ballin.
So that's going to do it.
I really appreciate your support.
Until next time, see ya.
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In May of 1980, near Anaheim, California,
Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed red wound on his arm and he seemed really unwell.
So she wound up taking him to the hospital right away so he could get treatment.
While Dorothy's friend waited for his prescription, Dorothy went to grab her car to pick him up at the exit.
But she would never be seen alive again, leaving us to wonder, decades later, what really happened
to Dorothy Jane Scott? From Wondery, Generation Y is a podcast that covers notable true crime cases
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