View Full Version : Set afire, teen now struggles for survival


Courtnee
11-03-2009, 09:13 PM
http://i.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/CRIME/11/02/teen.burned.recovery/t1larg.michael.brewer.family.jpg

Miami, Florida (CNN) -- He lies in a bed on a balloon-type mattress, to reduce pressure on his burned body. He is covered with bandages; a ventilator breathes for Michael Brewer because he can't do it for himself.
He's hooked up to the marvels of modern medicine that are trying to give the 15-year-old burn victim a chance to be a kid once again.
Sixty-five percent of his body is covered with second- and third-degree burns.
"People are writing horror stories ... but people just can't imagine the kind of sickness we're talking about," said Dr. Nicholas Namias, medical director of the University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital Burn Center in Miami.

"I've been to movies like everyone else, and Hollywood hasn't even thought of something like this," Namias said.
Brewer is heavily sedated, and the ventilator does not allow him to speak. His open wounds are covered by bandages, which are changed daily. It's a four-hour process.
He has not been able to speak with police since his desperate fight for life began October 12, when police say five teenage friends, including a 13-year-old, doused Brewer with rubbing alcohol and set him on fire.
The attack occurred after Brewer reported to police that one of the youths had stolen his father's bicycle. Police say the bicycle was stolen because Brewer did not pay one of the boys $40 for a video game.
According to police, witnesses said the teens called Brewer "a snitch" as they used a lighter to set him ablaze.
Namias explained how Brewer's organs are not functioning the way they should be, but that is expected at this early stage of recovery.
"He's still on the ventilator and advanced modes of mechanical ventilation. We are breathing for him. His contribution to the breathing is trivial," Namias said.
Namias also explained that in burn cases, words must be chosen carefully when talking about patients and their condition because so much is at risk and so much can change quickly.
"When you say he's doing OK, in this situation it means he's alive and responding to treatments," Namias said. "We're still dealing with the respiratory failure. We're dealing with infection now and the need to supply the massive amount of nutrition that this person needs to survive."
On Monday, the five teens who are accused of taking part in the attack appeared separately before judges in Broward County, Florida.
State prosecutors were granted additional time to build their case. Formal charges are expected later this month. For now, all five teens are being held in custody.
Four of the boys, all 15 years old, could be charged as adults. The 13-year-old also could be charged as an adult but under Florida law only if Brewer dies.
Michael Brewer's parents, Valerie and Michael Brewer Sr., issued a written statement through the hospital last week. They are not granting interviews.
"The recovery process will be baby steps, but eventually he will be whole again," they wrote.
But their son's injuries enter the realm of medicine and science that has no guarantee.
"There's no evolutionary mechanism to survive a 65 percent burn," Namias said.
"Surviving is a miracle of modern medicine and about the technology and the things we do. This is not like a gunshot and you come out of the [operating room], and say everything's going to be OK," he added.
"We never give up, and we never predict it. ... Our expectation is survival."
Across the hospital floor in the burn unit at Jackson Memorial Hospital, six other people's lives also are at stake: all victims of various accidents, all with burns similar to Michael Brewer's. They, too, are trying to regain at least a part of what they used to have.
"It's understandable that people can be burned in accidents," Namias said.
"But this was no accident. This didn't have to happen at all."

Marvo301
11-03-2009, 09:30 PM
It's scary to think that someone could deliberately do this to another human being. My thoughts and prayers are with Michael and his family.

browneyes106
11-03-2009, 10:04 PM
This story is very sickening. I wonder how the attackers were raised to end up doing something so horrible. My prayers go out to that boy and his family.

catlover79
11-03-2009, 10:31 PM
It's very sick - it reminds me of the David Rothenberg situation:

http://www.aiesalas.com/2009/09/david-rothenberg-burn-victim.html

comedyfreak
11-04-2009, 09:19 AM
It would almost be a blessing if the boy didn't make it only because it's so bad no one could imagine the agony he's going through at least he's under sedation. Those youths should be locked up in a mental institution and go through some kind of therapy and their parents should be questioned and their home life investigated.

Pitooey
11-04-2009, 10:22 AM
This whole thing has made me sick. The perpertrators have to be locked up and the key thrown away forever. :(

I wish I could personally hug the innocent child. (sniff)............

OH Nuts!
11-05-2009, 11:32 PM
This is just so horrible. You read things like this and you think society as a collective whole is going to hell in a hand basket. Something (clearly!) is very wrong with those kids. Thank God they're being tried as adults.

OH Nuts!
11-05-2009, 11:35 PM
It would almost be a blessing if the boy didn't make it only because it's so bad no one could imagine the agony he's going through at least he's under sedation. Those youths should be locked up in a mental institution and go through some kind of therapy and their parents should be questioned and their home life investigated.

Yes, what that poor kid is suffering...on so many levels. First of all having to come to terms with the psychological trauma, the disfigurement, the pain, the many many operations (both plastic surgery and other) And a very BIG YES to your second sentence.

TJL
11-06-2009, 12:57 AM
That is just terrible.

To the "kids" who did this to this poor boy - bye bye. You have forfeited your right to live among the normal folk. May your "time out" be a long one.

catlover79
11-06-2009, 01:06 AM
That is just terrible.

To the "kids" who did this to this poor boy - bye bye. You have forfeited your right to live among the normal folk. May your "time out" be a long one.
You said it, Tom!!! :clap :clap :clap