Daisy Stickney, who lives at Aliamanu Military Reservation in Hawaii, says her 16-year-old daughter went unresponsive this week and doctors aren’t sure why.
HONOLULU - Families who say they were sickened by the Navy’s fuel-tainted water are waging a legal battle over medical care to cover their children’s long-term symptoms.
Stickney says her daughter has suffered seizures and fainting spells since Thanksgiving weekend when military families started complaining of illnesses from the Navy’s fuel tainted water.Hawaii News NowMegan Hernandez of Ford Island says her 2-year-old daughter, Charlotte, is still recovering after she was sickened that same weekend.
“It looks like it was reported on or about the 20th of November, but my kids were not getting clean water until the 9th or 10th of December,” Feindt said.
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