Baltimore Sun Sunday

Colorado murder case raises questions about mom, doctors

- By Colleen Slevin

DENVER — Olivia Gant’s mother brought her to the emergency room when she was 2, saying the girl was having trouble eating.

Kelly Turner, who had recently moved to Colorado from Texas with her three daughters, told the doctor she had problems nursing and other complicati­ons feeding Olivia since she was born.

Over several years, Turner would often tell doctors her daughter was sick. Olivia had surgeries, took medication for a condition she didn’t have and later died, a tragic end to what psychiatri­sts say was her mother’s apparent scheme to dupe medical profession­als.

Now, Turner has been charged with murder, raising questions about whether the hospital did enough to protect Olivia and underscori­ng how much doctors rely on parents’ word as they care for children.

At the first ER visit, a doctor thought the girl appeared to be growing normally. But the next year, a surgeon at the same hospital removed part of her small intestine and inserted a feeding tube.

By 2017, Turner was presenting her daughter as a dying girl with a host of diseases and a bucket list of wishes, seeking donations to help fulfill her dreams of catching a bad guy with police and being a firefighte­r. The Make-A-WishFounda­tion threw a “bat princess” costume party at a hotel that cost $11,000.

That year, doctors at Children’s Hospital Colorado found that the 7-yearold was only getting 30 percent of the nutrition she needed.

They couldn’t persuade Turner, described by one doctor as a “high maintenanc­e mother,” to try anything besides artificial feeding. She insisted her daughter enter hospice care, where Olivia died.

Olivia’s cause of death originally was listed as intestinal failure, but an autopsy done later found no evidence of that condition. Authoritie­s have not said what killed her, but the indictment revealed last week says that doctors went along with Turner’s push to stop feeding her daughter.

Along the way, Turner’s behavior raised suspicions. She continued to give Olivia seizure medication after doctors found she had no seizure condition and insisted she stop.

Only after Olivia died and Turner brought an older daughter to the same hospital with bone pain did doctors take a closer look.

They found news stories and online posts where Turner talked about diseases Olivia had that were not backed up by medical records. Turner claimed on a blog and a GoFundMe site that her daughter had a seizure disorder, a tumor and a buildup of fluid in the cavities deep within her brain.

Doctors contacted social workers, who launched an investigat­ion that led to exhuming Olivia’s body. Her older sister was separated from her mother and has not had any pain since, according to the indictment.

Psychiatri­sts say Turner’s behavior seems consistent with Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a psychologi­cal disorder in which parents or caregivers seek attention from the illness of their children or dependents and sometimes cause them injuries that require attention.

Turner brought up the disorder on her own with investigat­ors and denied that she had it.

A public defender representi­ng her did not return a call seeking comment on the 13 criminal counts against her, including murder, child abuse, theft and charitable fraud.

Experts said Munchausen by proxy cases are not easy to detect.

Dr. Khalid Afzal, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Chicago who helps investigat­e suspected Munchausen by proxy cases at the school’s children’s hospital, cautioned against blaming doctors.

“I don’t blame anyone who misses it because it’s a diagnosis of deception. It will present differentl­y next time,” he said.

 ?? DENVER POLICE DEPARTMENT 2017 ?? Olivia Gant rides with Cpt. Tim Scudder in April 2017 in Denver. Olivia, 7, died later that year in hospice care.
DENVER POLICE DEPARTMENT 2017 Olivia Gant rides with Cpt. Tim Scudder in April 2017 in Denver. Olivia, 7, died later that year in hospice care.
 ??  ?? Turner
Turner

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