Orlando Sentinel

A 12th death

- By Erika Pesantes and Linda Trischitta

has been linked to the Hollywood nursing home tragedy after Hurricane Irma knocked out AC to the facility.

A 12th patient of the sweltering Hollywood nursing home died Thursday, making her the youngest among the dead, according to the Broward Medical Examiner.

Dolores Biamonte, 57, was the latest to succumb to the stifling heat in the Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills. The facility was without air conditioni­ng for three days after Hurricane Irma.

Biamonte had the same symptoms as the other patients who were brought to Memorial Regional Hospital and died, so she is being included in the total deaths linked to the air conditione­r failure, the Medical Examiner’s Office said. An autopsy was scheduled.

Roberta Biamonte, the niece of the latest victim, said she spent some final moments late Thursday with her aunt, who was in hospice care after the nursing home evacuation. She said her goodbyes and left by about 9 p.m. It appears her aunt passed away after that.

“It’s sad, but she’s not suffering anymore. She’s missed deeply,” Roberta Biamonte, of Fort Lauderdale, said. “I’m proud to have her name as my middle name.”

Biamonte said her aunt was breathing heavily in her last hours. Dolores Biamonte suffered from a rare lifelong disease that affected her vision and ability to walk — she had been bedridden for about 20 years, her niece said.

“She was able to walk with someone holding on to her, and then it got worse as she got older,” she said. When Dolores Biamonte’s parents died, other relatives couldn’t give her round-the-clock care, so she moved into a nursing home. She lived at Hollywood Hills for more than three years, her niece said.

Roberta Biamonte said she’ll always remember her aunt’s love of all things feline. Her brother would sometimes bring a cat to Hollywood Hills to bring a smile to Dolores Biamonte’s face.

“She loved watching Animal Planet; she watched it every day. She couldn’t see, so she would listen to it,” her niece said. “She had a passion for cats. Anything that had a cat on it, from a shirt to a little cat figure, if it had a cat, she wanted it.

“And she loved painting her nails when she was able to do more, when I was younger,” Roberta Biamonte said.

Since the first eight victims died Sept. 13, Hollywood police and the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t have launched a criminal investigat­ion into how the nursing home cared for patients; the state has shut down the facility; and legislator­s have vowed to better protect nursing home patients — the same promise they have made in the past.

The deaths also have raised questions about Florida Power & Light Co.’s response to life-threatenin­g situations and have spurred intense finger-pointing among state, local and utility officials about who is at fault.

The eight people who died Sept. 13, three days after the storm, were: Albertina Vega, 99; Carolyn Eatherly, 78; Manuel Mario Mendieta, 96; Gail Nova, 70; Bobby Owens, 84; Miguel Antonio Franco, 92; Estella Hendricks, 71; and Betty Hibbard, 84. In the days after the initial deaths, three others died: Martha Murray, 94; Carlos Canal, 93; and Alice Thomas, 94.

Among those who died, body temperatur­es were as high as 109.9 degrees.

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