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‘Slapping therapy’ healer ‘failed to get help’ for dying diabetic woman at workshop


Hongchi Xiao and Danielle Carr-Gomm

Hongchi Xiao is accused of manslaughter by gross negligence after the death of Danielle Carr-Gomm (Picture: Facebook/Wiltshire Police/Solent News)

An ‘alternative healer’ is in court after failing to help a diabetic woman who lay dying at a ‘slapping therapy’ workshop.

Danielle Carr-Gomm, 71, died on the fourth day of the alternative healing retreat at Cleeve House in Seend, Wiltshire in October 2016.

A warrant for the arrest of class leader Hongchi Xiao was issued three years later and the 61-year-old is now on trial having been charged with manslaughter by gross negligence.

Danielle, from Lewes in East Sussex, had been looking for alternatives to taking insulin for her type 1 diabetes due to being vegetarian and scared of needles.

She first sought help from Xiao, 61, in Bulgaria in July 2016. He ‘evangelised’ Paida Lajin therapy as a replacement for insulin, the court heard.

Prosecutor Duncan Atkinson said: ‘It is said to be a method of self-healing in which “poisonous waste” is expelled from the body through patting and slapping parts of the body.’

Hongchi Xiao is in court accused of manslaughter by gross negligence (Picture: Facebook)

Danielle Carr-Gomm wanted to stop taking insulin for her diabetes (Picture: Wiltshire Police/Solent News)

Danielle completed the workshop in Bulgaria and stopped taking her insulin, but she became ‘extremely unwell, started vomiting and became hard to reason with’, Mr Atkinson said.

She had to be persuaded to start taking insulin again, and she then recovered.

Mr Atkinson said: ‘The defendant was present, spoke to her about taking insulin, and was in a position to see the effects on Mrs Carr-Gomm both of her ceasing to take her insulin and of restarting the injections.’

Danielle then went to Xiao’s workshop in Wiltshire three months later and again stopped taking her diabetes medication and became ill.

Mr Atkinson said she died on the fourth day of the retreat after Xiao failed to call for help, saying: ‘He knew that Mrs Carr-Gomm was risking death, and he knew that he had an influence over her decision.

‘In short, therefore he chose to congratulate a diabetic who stopped injecting, rather than to persuade them not to take so grievous a risk to their life.’

Danielle became increasingly unwell, and by the second day of the retreat she could be heard ‘crying and yelling’ while laying in bed, was ‘vomiting, tired and weak’ by the third day, and she was moved from her bed to a mattress on the floor because she fell out of bed.

‘Those who had received and accepted the defendant’s teachings misinterpreted Mrs Carr-Gomm’s condition as a healing crisis,’ Mr Atkinson said.

Xiao denies the charges (Picture: PA)

The retreat took place at Cleve House (Picture: Facebook)

‘In that period of increasing danger, the medical evidence is that Mrs Carr-Gomm’s life could have been saved if medical aid was called.

‘By the time that such medical aid was finally called on day four, October 20, 2016, it was too late, and Danielle Carr-Gomm had died of diabetic ketoacidosis as a direct result of the decision to stop taking her insulin injections.

‘That decision …read more

Source:: Metro

      

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