Harrowing final moments of mum who died from agonising 'heat stress' in desert

Harrowing final moments of mum who died from agonising 'heat stress' in desert


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MUM-OF-TWO MELISSA GALLIA, 50, WAS FOUND DEAD IN A LAS VEGAS CAR PARK AFTER SUFFERING FROM HEATSTROKE - HER FAMILY SAY SHE WAS DISCHARGED BY A HOSPITAL DESPITE BEING CHECKED INTO A REHAB


FACILITY 16:48, 31 May 2025 A devastated family are suing an addiction centre after a mum died of 'heat stress' while wandering the streets in baking hot 41C conditions. Melissa


Gallia, 50, was found dead just days after she checked herself into a rehab facility for her alcohol problems. The mother-of-two was discovered in a car park near Sunrise Hospital and


Medical Centre in Las Vegas last July after suffering heat exhaustion, a condition triggered by the body's reaction to extreme high temperatures. She had been transferred to the


hospital by the addiction centre within a couple of days of checking herself in after suffering hallucinations, but was quickly discharged to her home after displaying what medical records


allegedly described as 'drug-seeking' behaviour. A lawsuit launched by her family in the aftermath of her death has described the treatment she received from both the rehab and the


hospital as "outrageous, wilful, wanton, reckless and malicious", with one line of the complaint reading: "In sum, Melissa Gallia died, and died alone, in a parking lot


adjacent to Sunrise Hospital due to the actions and inactions of the Defendants." According to the legal documents seen by the Las Vegas Review Journal, Ms Gallia developed an alcohol


problem following the death of her mother, and had sought help from the Dessert Hope late in the evening on June 29 last year. She handed over her belongings, and signed papers giving


consent for the rehab to discuss her medical information with her husband, father and the hospital. Article continues below Her family was given an update the next morning after she began


being administered medication, but her symptoms sharply worsened, and by the end of the day she told staff she was "seeing things moving". "Worsening" visual


hallucinations followed overnight, and workers eventually called the emergency services after Ms Gallia began displaying "restless" behaviour. According to the complaint, she was


taken to Sunrise Hospital at 5.54am on July 1, but was not admitted until 11.06am, was discharged less than 30 minutes later. In her medical records, it was stated doctors had diagnosed her


with a "urinary infection" and mentioned her being seen at an "outside facility but not prescribed antibiotics". It is alleged medics at Sunrise Hospital did not receive


vital information about her condition, and had no record of her insurance or employment. Ms Gallia was recorded as having showed "drug seeking behaviour" and was discharged to home


- something which her family says should never have happened. Article continues below That same day, she was found "lying on the ground" and "unresponsive" in a car park


near the hospital, and was pronounced dead at 6.52pm after having suffered "environmental heat stress." Robert Murdock, an attorney representing Gallia’s family, said her case


showed "issue upon issue, problem upon problem" from both the treatment centre and hospital, and stated that the law clearly showed that you "can’t just discharge somebody and


throw them out on the street". The family's lawsuit for wrongful death is seeking unspecified damages.