Kapiti News

Asphyxia by sand killed young dad on beach walk

The 25-year-old had collapsed face down

- Hazel Osborne Hazel is an Open Justice reporter for NZME based in Wellington.

Warning: this story contains details that may be upsetting for some readers.

A.. .. .. .. .. .. ndre Bradshaw died doing what he loved, walking along the beach with his 2-year-old daughter Skyla. He was kind. A beloved friend, son and father who volunteere­d a decade of his life to help animals at the SPCA. He loved his daughter with his whole heart.

In the words of the woman who raised him, his guardian Mary Coppins, “he was just wonderful”.

When the 25-year-old died suddenly, in front of his daughter, on Raumati Beach earlier this year, his family was unsure of the exact circumstan­ces.

But now a coroner’s findings have finally provided them with answers.

The cause was asphyxia by sand which occurred after he suffered a medical event and fell face down on to the sand. A post-mortem examinatio­n found fragments of sand in his windpipe and lungs.

According to Coroner Mark Wilton’s findings, the Wellington builder and his daughter were walking together along Raumati Beach around midday on June 28.

He was last seen alive by Skyla’s mother, Meya Cameron, at 11.50am.

An hour later, his death was confirmed by paramedics after he was found unresponsi­ve on the beach by a member of the public.

Bradshaw had a medical history that included a remote seizure-like disorder which was attributed to a conversion disorder, Coroner Wilton said in his findings.

He also had a nerve condition thought to be related to chronic regional pain syndrome.

The night before his death, Bradshaw presented at an after-hours medical centre complainin­g of severe upper back and neck pain, for which he was prescribed tramadol.

Forensic pathologis­t Dr Judy Melinek, who conducted the postmortem examinatio­n, advised Bradshaw’s cardiovasc­ular disease and seizure-like disorder “were significan­t contributo­ry conditions that

reasonably explain his sudden collapse and subsequent asphyxiati­on.

“Dr Melinek also advises that the presence of three different viruses in Mr Bradshaw’s system at the time of his death could have caused Mr Bradshaw’s collapse and aspiration as well.”

Those viruses were human parainflue­nza virus 3, influenza type b, and rhinovirus/enteroviru­s infections.

Coroner Wilton said there were no suspicious circumstan­ces surroundin­g Bradshaw’s death and no inquest was held.

Des and Mary Coppins, the couple who raised Bradshaw from a young age, spoke to NZME about the “kind” and “wonderful” person he was.

In the days after his death, their home was filled with people mourning his loss, they said.

Meya Cameron was approached

for comment by NZME but declined.

However, in a Givealittl­e page she created to raise funds for their daughter, she said Bradshaw had died doing what he loved the most, and that was going to the beach with Skyla.

“We are in complete shock. Skyla was everything to Andre and Skyla will always look up to her Dada.”

 ?? ?? Andre Bradshaw would often take his daughter Skyla for ‘dad-daughter’ dates at Catch Sushi in Wellington.
Andre Bradshaw would often take his daughter Skyla for ‘dad-daughter’ dates at Catch Sushi in Wellington.

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