Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

‘PREVENTABL­E TRAGEDY’

Suburban family says Peace Corps at fault for 24- year- old daughter’s death from malaria

- STEPHANIE ZIMMERMANN REPORTS,

Serving in the Peace Corps had been Bernice Heiderman’s dream since high school.

When the north suburban resident finally got accepted during her senior year of college, she wept with joy at the news, her family says.

But just 18 months into her tour, the 24- year- old volunteer from Inverness was dead in a spartan hotel room in the East African island nation of Comoros, the victim of what her family calls a “preventabl­e tragedy.”

They say Heiderman endured a painful death from malaria that went undiagnose­d by a local Peace Corps physician as well by a medical officer in Washington, even though the disease is endemic in Comoros.

On Friday, the family filed a wrongful- death lawsuit in federal court in Chicago against the U. S. government.

Had the local doctor “been trained properly, I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that Bernice would be alive today,” says her mother, Julie Heiderman.

And the family says the mistakes that led to Bernice Heiderman’s death were compounded by bungling actions afterward — including a delay in repatriati­ng her remains that made her miss her own funeral.

The 2016 graduate of the University of Illinois at Chicago was posted to the capital city of Moroni, on the Indian Ocean archipelag­o of Comoros. She taught English to junior high students, employing skills she’d learned volunteeri­ng at the Field Museum.

She celebrated the end of 2017 with friends but, by New Year’s Eve, felt nauseated. On Jan. 1, 2018, she texted her mother, saying she couldn’t “stop shaking from the chills” and felt “in a fog.” At her mom’s urging, she contacted the Peace Corps’ local doctor and saw him Jan. 2.

By then, the lawsuit says, the young volunteer had “headaches, dizziness, fever and vomiting” — all symptoms of malaria. But the doctor didn’t perform a rapid blood test for the mosquito- borne infection even though malaria is common there, according to the suit.

“They would have known in a matter of minutes that she had malaria, and they could have treated her,” Julie Heiderman says.

Instead, the doctor gave her aspirin and an antacid.

Later, as Heiderman’s condition worsened, he moved her to a room at a modest hotel.

As her parents worried back home, Heiderman got sicker, with

frequent vomiting, chest and abdominal pain, low blood pressure and a fast heart rate.

The morning of Jan. 9, she collapsed in the bathroom and died.

A report last year from the Peace Corps’ inspector general said test kits and treatments were readily available and that, “had she received timely treatment, she could have made a rapid, full recovery.”

The doctor “had limited training in infectious diseases and limited clinical experience” in such cases, according to the report.

It noted that the agency later learned Heiderman had stopped taking her antimalari­al pills — a violation of Peace Corps rules — but said a “passive and ineffectiv­e approach” meant this informatio­n wasn’t tracked. The lawsuit says Peace Corps medical personnel had told Heiderman and other volunteers incorrectl­y “that malaria had been eradicated from Comoros.”

The Peace Corps didn’t respond to a request for comment Friday.

Last year, officials said the government agency “continues to mourn the tragic loss” and “has undertaken a rigorous internal review ... and is implementi­ng numerous changes.”

Congress passed a law in late 2018 aimed at improving medical care for Peace Corps volunteers and to strengthen oversight. The law was named for another volunteer — Nick Castle, 23 — who died in 2013 in China of gastrointe­stinal illness.

The Heiderman family says its anguish was compounded by what happened after her death. Instead of sending a Peace Corps representa­tive to their home, someone phoned them to say their daughter had died.

Later, a Peace Corps representa­tive suggested that her death was “her fault” because she “probably did not take her medication,”

the lawsuit says. Another said she “never told the doctor that she needed to be tested for malaria.”

And Peace Corps officials delayed flying her body home, waiting for additional cargo to justify the expense, according to the lawsuit.

“We had her memorial service without her,” Julie Heiderman says.

When the plane carrying her body did arrive at O’Hare Airport, the Peace Corps assured the Heidermans they could go onto the tarmac to receive it, but the agency apparently didn’t clear that with the Department of Homeland Security, which initially barred them because Heiderman wasn’t in the military, according to the suit.

“I know she wasn’t military,” Julie Heiderman says, but she still was representi­ng the United States abroad. “She said, ‘ I’m serving my country, but I’m not carrying a gun.’ ”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES ?? Julie and Bill Heiderman hold a photo of their daughter Bernice Heiderman.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES Julie and Bill Heiderman hold a photo of their daughter Bernice Heiderman.
 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED BY FAMILY ?? Bernice Heiderman taught English to junior high students on the Indian Ocean archipelag­o of Comoros.
PHOTO PROVIDED BY FAMILY Bernice Heiderman taught English to junior high students on the Indian Ocean archipelag­o of Comoros.
 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES ?? Julie Heiderman looks at photos of her daughter Bernice. This is the third holiday season since her death.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES Julie Heiderman looks at photos of her daughter Bernice. This is the third holiday season since her death.

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