POLICE FEAR ‘ANGEL OF DEATH’ AT HOSPITAL
TOKYO Japanese police are investigating the possibility that an “angel of death” may have been behind the suspicious deaths of 48 patients at a hospital in Yokohama.
Police initially opened an investigation into the deaths of two patients at the Oguchi Hospital, south west of Tokyo, after staff determined that their intravenous drips had been tampered with. The plastic drip bags had been pierced and the solution contaminated with a compound, possibly a disinfectant. Police have since found a further 10 unused intravenous drip bags that had been pierced and have announced that they are looking into the deaths of a further 46 patients over the space of 82 days from July 1.
Authorities at the 85-bed hospital told local media that they were aware of the spike in deaths, but assumed it was because the facility had been accepting more elderly and terminally ill patients.
The investigation is being complicated by the fact that the bodies of the majority of the dead have already been cremated, but police suspect that the killings were carried out by a person employed at the hospital and with some medical knowledge.
The 10 drip bags that have subsequently been found to be damaged were stored behind the nurses’ desk on the fourth floor of the hospital, where all the suspicious deaths happened.