Bobbi Kristina Brown moved to hospice care: Family
Bobbi Kristina with her family in the 2005 Bravo reality series “Being Bobby Brown”.
When a patient is moved to a hospice, it’s usually to provide specialized care for the final stages of a terminal illness, with the goal of providing comfort and pain-control medication. “She’s in God’s hands now”, Pat Houston told ET in a statement.
She said: “Despite the great medical care at numerous facilities, Bobbi Kristina Brown‘s condition has continued to deteriorate”. Further, they are jointly responsible for all decisions regarding her care and medical needs.
It appears that Bobbi Kristina’s condition is getting worse.
[Bobbi Kristina Houston Brown’s turbulent life and its many mysteries]. Her aunt Pat Houston announced it in a statement issued on Wednesday, June 24.
Pat, the wife of Whitney’s brother Gary, and Bobbi’s dad, Bobby Brown, have joint legal guardianship of Bobbi Kristina.
Her father, Bobby Brown, and members of his family have said at various times that she was awake or that she was getting better.
As Radar reported, Brown never made the appointment and she was found unconscious and unresponsive in a bathtub.
Her mouth was swollen and another tooth had been knocked out.
“Of course I worry about her”, her grandmother Cissy Houston said in 2013. “I do not want to jinx her. I’m trying to make sure she does not”.
The lawsuit says she has irreversible brain damage.
According to a story from The Atlanta Journal Constitution, the suit seeks $10 million from Gordon, and was filed by Brown’s conservator Bedelia C. Hargrove in Superior Court of Fulton County in Georgia.
It claims that Gordon had previously punched Brown in the face, knocking out a front tooth, and had dragged her upstairs by her hair. The complaint alleged that Gordon routinely transferred large amounts of money from Bobbi Kristina’s accounts to his without her permission.
Bobbi Kristina Brown (R) and Nick Gordon arrive at Tri-Star Pictures” “Sparkle’ premiere at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre on August 16, 2012 in Hollywood, California.
The lawsuit claims that as part of Gordon’s “scheme to benefit from her wealth”, he eventually moved some of Brown’s money, including $11,000 while she lay in a coma, into accounts only he could access.