Some war room intreviews - But here is a summary from Grok that highlights these claims:
Regarding medical failure, the details are less definitive but raise questions:
Initial Treatment: Peter told The Atlantic that when they first took her to the hospital (likely Seminole Hospital District, though not specified), doctors diagnosed her with measles, gave her cough medicine, and sent her home, saying it was “normal.” No aggressive treatment was provided at that point. A Seminole Hospital District spokeswoman declined to comment due to privacy laws, so it’s unclear if this initial response missed critical signs of worsening illness.
Subsequent Care: As her condition declined—“her lungs plugged up,” per her father—the family returned her to medical care. She was then transferred to Lubbock, placed on a ventilator, and died three days later on a Tuesday night. Official reports don’t specify the exact timeline or interventions beyond the ventilator, but pneumonia in measles cases can escalate quickly, especially in unvaccinated children.
Alternative Claims: Posts on X from groups like Children’s Health Defense and individuals claim she died from “erroneous treatment” of mycoplasma pneumonia, not measles itself, suggesting antibiotics like azithromycin (Z-Pak) should have been used instead of vancomycin. Others allege she had RSV and pneumonia prior to measles, contracted measles in the hospital, and was denied breathing treatments. These claims lack corroboration from official sources like DSHS or Covenant Health, and no autopsy or detailed medical records have been publicly released to confirm them. Mycoplasma pneumonia typically requires specific antibiotics, but measles-related pneumonia is often viral or complicated by secondary bacterial infections, and treatment details remain unverified here.