Diego Maradona could have been saved, judge blames medical staff for negligence

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Judge orders homicide trial for eight medical staffers in charge of late Argentine football legend; blames them for negligence leading to his death


Diego Maradona






Eight medical personnel will stand trial for alleged criminal neglect causing Argentine football legend Diego Maradona to die in bed while receiving post-surgery care.

A judge on Wednesday ordered a culpable homicide trial for the eight, who include the footballer‘s family doctor and nurses, based on evidence that they had failed to take “action that could have prevented the death” in November 2020.

No trial date set

No trial date has been set. Maradona died aged 60 while recovering from brain surgery for a blood clot, and after decades of battles with cocaine and alcohol addictions. He was found dead in bed two weeks after going under the knife, in a rented house in an exclusive Buenos Aires neighbourhood where he was brought after being discharged from hospital. He was found to have died of a heart attack. A panel of 20 medical experts convened by Argentina’s public prosecutor concluded last year that Maradona’s treatment was rife with “deficiencies and irregularities.”

It said the footballer “would have had a better chance of survival” with adequate treatment in an appropriate medical facility. The experts found his caregivers had abandoned the idolised player to his fate for a “prolonged, agonising period” leading up to his death.

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Prosecutors asked for his caregivers to be put on trial for negligent homicide, charging that they had abandoned him “to his fate.” The eight will stand trial on a legal definition of homicide characterised by negligence committed in the knowledge that it may lead to a person’s death.

‘Reckless treatment’

Charged in the case are neurosurgeon and family doctor Leopoldo Luque, psychiatrist Agustina Cosachov, psychologist Carlos Diaz, medical coordinator Nancy Forlini, nursing coordinator Mariano Perroni, nurses Ricardo Almiron and Dahiana Madrid, and clinician Pedro Paglo Di Spagna. Prosecutors have charged the defendants with being “the protagonists of an unprecedented, totally deficient and reckless hospitalisation at home.” The ex-Boca Juniors, Barcelona and Napoli star suffered from liver, kidney and cardiovascular disorders when he died.

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