Woman suffers hot car death outside Nevada hospital after being barred from accompanying husband

Woman suffers hot car death outside Nevada hospital after being barred from accompanying husband

A 75-year-old woman died while sitting in a hot car outside a Nevada hospital after staff barred her from entering the facility due to coronavirus protocols.

Lear Litt, 75, sat in her car in 110 degree heat after officials at the North Las Vegas VA Hospital said she could not accompany her husband, David Litt, while he went underwent a blood transfusion in August 2020.

Visitors were not permitted in the emergency department due to COVID rules.

Lear, who went out to the parking lot around 9.30am, was found dead in her car shortly after 2.30pm with a body temperature of 109 degrees, KLAS reported.

‘Rapid response in the parking lot,’ David Lear, now 78, recalled hearing over the PA system. ‘Someone’s doing compressions and I’m across the hall from where this is taking place, but I knew it was her. Without even seeing it, I knew it was her.’

David underwent his procedure on August 20, 2020 during the peak of pandemic. Hospitals across the nation were battling capacity constraints and most of the world was still under lockdown.

David Litt asked hospital staff to check on his wife around 2.30pm after she failed to answer his phone calls. She was pronounced dead shortly afterwards

David Litt asked hospital staff to check on his wife around 2.30pm after she failed to answer his phone calls. She was pronounced dead shortly afterwards

The couple, who were married 57 years, arrived at the facility in the morning only to find out Lear was not allowed in the building.

‘They allowed her to come in to tell me she couldn’t come in,’ David told the TV station last week. ‘That’s when I gave her my phone. I said: “Okay, I’ll call you to find out how you’re doing.”‘

Lear sat in her parked car, which was not running, for several hours waiting for her husband’s treatment to end.

A doctor heading into the facility reportedly spoke to her around noon, alleging she had been in the car with the windows rolled down. The car was turned off.

The doctor claims Lear said the vehicle was low on gas so she couldn’t let in run, an assertion that David questioned.

‘One thing I made a habit of [was] never getting below half-a-tank of gas,’ the veteran widower explained.

id-afternoon, after David instructed staff to check on his wife because she wasn’t answering his calls, Lear was found unresponsive and rushed into the hospital.

Officials attempted to resuscitate her, but were unsuccessful. Lear was pronounced dead at the facility.

The coroner’s report indicates she died from hyperthermia. Her death was ruled an accident.

David, who continues to mourn the loss of his high school sweetheart, seemingly believes the incident was avoided.

‘I think that could’ve been handled a lot differently,’ he said.

In wake of Lear’s death, which was investigated by multiple VA departments, a new policy has been instated at the hospital.

Patients are now allowed one visitor to accompany them at their appointment. The hospital has also increased patrols in the parking lot.

‘The unfortunate reality was we spent so much time on risk assessing, protect veterans, protect staff and after that incident occurred, we had to take a step back and say, well, there is a secondary risk too because of the weather out here,’ William Caron, the head of VA Southern Nevada Healthcare System, said.

‘Do you think a mistake was made by the people that interacted with her?’ KLAS reporter Vanessa Murphy questioned.