Current:Home > MarketsFamily of child burned in over-chlorinated resort pool gets $26 million settlement -Excel Money Vision
Family of child burned in over-chlorinated resort pool gets $26 million settlement
View
Date:2025-04-17 07:48:17
A South Carolina resort will pay $26 million to the family of a child who suffered serious chemical burns from an overchlorinated pool, an attorney for the family said.
According to a federal lawsuit, the North Carolina family sued Myrtle Beach’s Caribbean Resort, after their then 3-year-old child suffered severe burns from the pool when they visited in May 2020.
The lawsuit on behalf of Heather Douglas, the little boy's mother said she noticed her son Ashtyn Douglas' "groin and buttocks" were red after they finished swimming in the resort's pools and lazy rivers on May 25, 2020.
Douglas applied some lotion on Ashtyn and headed home. The next day, she noticed that his skin began to blister and took him to his pediatrician who prescribed him Bactroban. However, the next day, the blisters got worse, and Douglas took her child back to the pediatrician.
Ashtyn was then sent to a local hospital, before being transferred to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Burn Center.
There, the blisters were diagnosed "as chemical burns related to exposure to an overchlorinated pool at the Caribbean Resort and Villas," the lawsuit said.
Injured:Preventable injuries are killing America's children. But some are more at risk than others.
Ashtyn will live with scars for the rest of his life
The now 7-year-old spent a week in the burn unit receiving treatment.
"What Ashtyn went through initially was this God-awful pain. His skin was being eaten away by chemicals. That's the way chlorine burns work – it doesn't typically happen all at once. It eats the skin away," Kenneth Berger, an attorney for the family told USA TODAY.
Berger said it wasn't just the treatments in the hospital that were tough on Ashtyn, but the wound care afterward.
Debridement is the surgical removal of dead tissue from a wound. During his treatment, Ashtyn experienced loss of appetite, immobility, discomfort, fever, pain, and nausea, the lawsuit said.
At home, Ashtyn had to get wound care multiple times a day.
"One of the things his family members talked about was that a couple of the men in the family, tough guys, and one who was former military, actually couldn't participate in Ashtyn's wound care when they got home because it hurt their feelings too much. They talked about it being like torture, where you'd have four family members holding this child down while his mother worked to clean his wound," Berger said.
Resort employee admitted falsifying chlorine levels, attorney says
According to the lawsuit, Douglas called the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control and reported that Ashtyn was burned from swimming in the resort's pools. The agency then inspected the pools and found that they had "dangerously" high chlorine levels that did not comply with state-mandated standards for public pools.
Additionally, Berger said an employee deposed during the case admitted to falsifying chlorine levels to DHEC for three and a half years. The attorney said resort employees and leadership appeared to not care that the levels were falsified and illegal.
According to the attorney, resort workers deposed claimed they received no other complaints but a check of the resort's Google reviews showed several other people complaining of skin issues from chlorine.
"When confronted with that evidence, their answer was 'We thought you meant legal complaints, not actual complaints to the resort,' -- Which we found incredibly disingenuous," Berger said.
"At that point, they disclosed a few complaints concerning people with burns or skin issues but claimed that those incidents were only after Ashtyn got burned, which we found hard to believe," he added.
The resort did not respond to USA TODAY's request for comment.
Berger said the lawsuit was never about money.
"His mother never once asked about money throughout the entire case. From the first time I met her, until the last time I spoke with her, it was all about accountability and making sure this never happened to anybody else. Throughout the course of the entire case, we never once heard the word sorry, or an apology from this resort" he said.
For Ashtyn, the settlement isn't the end of the incident. Berger said this is something the young child will have to live with for the rest of his life.
"Ashtyn's got many, many, many years ahead of him, God willing. He's never gonna forget this. He's never going to forget the scars that run along the right side of his groin and his waistband. The people who caused it should never forget either," Berger said.
veryGood! (95236)
Related
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Nipah: Using sticks to find a fatal virus with pandemic potential
- 7 tiny hacks that can improve your to-do list
- With less access to paid leave, rural workers face hard choices about health, family
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Ukraine: Under The Counter
- A Solar City Tries to Rise in Turkey Despite Lack of Federal Support
- Can Trump Revive Keystone XL? Nebraskans Vow to Fight Pipeline Anew
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Eva Mendes Proves She’s Ryan Gosling’s No. 1 Fan With Fantastic Barbie T-Shirt
Ranking
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- 988 Lifeline sees boost in use and funding in first months
- Agent: Tori Bowie, who died in childbirth, was not actively performing home birth when baby started to arrive
- Video: The Standing Rock ‘Water Protectors’ Who Refuse to Leave and Why
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Gigi Hadid Shares What Makes Her Proud of Daughter Khai
- 9 diseases that keep epidemiologists up at night
- Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp warns GOP not to get bogged down in Trump indictment
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
Damar Hamlin is in 'good spirits' and recovering at a Buffalo hospital, team says
Job Boom in Michigan, as Clean Energy Manufacturing Drives Economic Recovery
A sleeping man dreamed someone broke into his home. He fired at the intruder and shot himself, authorities say.
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
U.S. Army soldier Cole Bridges pleads guilty to attempting to help ISIS murder U.S. troops
Gigi Hadid Shares What Makes Her Proud of Daughter Khai
A police dog has died in a hot patrol car for the second time in a week