Friday, 6 February 2015

Bobbi Kristina Brown: 'Doctors See No Hope'

A cousin says "the odds are against her" but Whitney Houston's daughter has not been taken off life support, a family source says.


Bobbi Kristina Brown's cousin has said "doctors don't see any hope for change" after she was found unresponsive in a bathtub at her home.
However, the family denied reports that the 21-year-old, the daughter of Whitney Houston, had been taken off life support.
Posting on Instagram as yfkennedy, Jerod Brown wrote: "Though it seems the odds are against her, though doctors don't see any hope for change… though it looks impossible for her to stand again STILL PRAY FOR BK."


Few details about the young woman's condition have been released.
Her family said she was fighting for her life after she was found face down in the bathtub of her suburban Atlanta townhouse and rushed to hospital on Saturday.
Family friend and gospel singer Kim Burrell told Access Hollywood this week that doctors had put the young woman in a medically induced coma to stop brain swelling.
However, claims that she had been pulled off life support or declared brain dead were denied by a family source, Reuters reported.
Her father Bobby Brown said in a statement: "If we issued a statement every time the media published a false report regarding this matter, that's all we would be doing 24 hours a day.
"This is false, just as is the vast majority of the other reporting that is currently taking place."
Meanwhile, police were called to a nearby hotel after a relative of Bobby Brown reportedly hit another relative in the head with a bottle during a fight.
Police did not specify their relationships to the entertainer or to each other, or what the fight was about.
Houston, a six-time Grammy Award winner and actress who battled substance abuse, was found unresponsive in a bathtub on 11 February 2012.
Authorities found a dozen prescription drug bottles in the 48-year-old's Beverly Hills Hotel suite and concluded that she accidentally drowned, although heart disease and cocaine use were listed as contributing factors.

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