
BBC News

Retired Premier League player Kevin Campbell has died of cardiovascular disease due to natural causes, the forensic physician said.
Former Everton and Arsenal striker He died on June 15, 2013 at the age of
The Manchester Court of Forensic Medicine has heard that “unpleasant despair” when he was admitted to hospital several months before his death and lost more than half of his body weight.
Zack Golombek forensic physician has found that the delay in detection of rare heart infection “had not slightly contributed to his death.
Dr. Robert Henny, MRI, told the study that many people “maybe no longer alive to reach the hospital” in his own circumstances.
Mr. Campbell, who has also played for Nottingam Forest and Trabzonspore in Turkey, has been in good shape until about January 2024.
The session was told that he suffered from heart and kidney failure, but no basic cause of health was identified during the first six and a half weeks in hospital.
He heard that he was discharged in March 2024, after being taken back to hospital in May, and then taken to hospital in May.
Mr. Golombeck pointed out that Mr. Campbell has lost more than half of his body weight between the two admissions.
He said “lost opportunities” to identify Mr. Campbell as a heart infection, known as the lining of the heart, “has no more than the least contributing to death on the balance of possibilities.

Mr. Campbell died in June and a temporarily cause of death was given as the failure of several members.
MRI announced a safety event at the level 5 to investigate whether the delay in diagnosis of the infection could contribute to death.
The investigation, who heard that this later went down into a second-level event, and the hospital concluded that his death “maybe of evasion but not too much.
Dr. Henny said the results of previous shootings and tests suggest that “heart inflammation was not available at the first time.
Cardiologist Dr. Colin Canington told the meeting that Campbell is likely to suffer from infection between the two admissions, as well as weight loss.
Mr. Golombek described the medical cause as “the failure of several organs of the heart attack in the heart and pneumonia of the hospital.