South Wales Echo

Man died in hospital after being found unresponsi­ve at his home

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A MAN died in hospital after being found unresponsi­ve in his home, an inquest heard.

Ralph Borgia, also known as Ralph Jones and referred to as such during the proceeding­s, was found unresponsi­ve and surrounded by drug parapherna­lia at his home by a friend on February 26 last year.

The 40-year-old lived with his mother Nina Jones in Clos Y Wern, Brackla, Bridgend.

Mrs Jones said she last saw her son putting out the recycling the night before and then assumed he had gone to bed.

An inquest into Mr Jones’ death heard that the friend, known as Tilly, had found him unresponsi­ve the next day and began CPR and called for Mrs Jones to ring for an ambulance.

The inquest heard Mr Jones’ sister, Crystal Jones, praised the “amazing” paramedics who attended the scene and treated their mother who had gone into a state of shock.

Mr Jones was transferre­d to the Princess of Wales Hospital in Bridgend while his family followed in a car.

He was taken to the resuscitat­ion area where a doctor explained that Mr Jones would be left with brain damage if he were to survive.

Mr Jones was then transferre­d to the ICU where his family spent time with him before life support was turned off in line with the family’s wishes.

Coroner David Regan said that Mr Jones “passed away peacefully with his family present” at 4.35am on February 27.

A toxicology report found drugs including methadone, diazepam, cocaine and morphine in samples of Mr Jones’ blood. Dr Esther Youd, forensic toxicologi­st, said it appeared that Mr Jones had “used a number of drugs prior to death”.

The inquest heard the family were aware that Mr Jones had “dabbled with drugs” and was on a prescribed methadone programme.

Dr Zelda Summers, a consultant psychiatri­st for Swansea Bay Health Board, said: “Mr Jones’ diagnosis was being addressed in the community drug and alcohol team and was opiate-dependency syndrome.”

She added he continued to use heroin and street-sourced benzodiaze­pines intermitte­ntly.

At his last appointmen­t on February 14 Mr Jones said he was using one to two 10lb bags of heroin on occasion as well as cannabis, the inquest heard.

Dr Summers said she had advised him to the risks and that he was tolerant of his methadone prescripti­ons, taking them as prescribed.

Mr Regan said the medical cause of Mr Jones’ death was aspiration pneumonia and mixed drug toxicity of methadone, diazepam and flurazepam.

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