Health

Doctors Perform Blood Test Suicidal 13 Year Old Quickly Realize what

Ruth Kamau  ·  November 9, 2015

BOSTON (Nov. 9, 2015) — In a quiet hospital room on a chilly autumn evening, doctors faced a heart-wrenching case: a 13-year-old girl had been brought in after attempting to harm herself, her parents frantic and the staff scrambling for answers.

The team decided to run a routine blood test, hoping to uncover any physical issues that might explain her sudden despair. As the results came back faster than expected, the doctors noticed something alarming right away. The girl’s blood showed unusually high levels of a toxin, likely from an accidental exposure at home. It turned out she had ingested a common household chemical, which can mimic symptoms of severe mental health crises in kids her age.

That quick realization changed everything. Instead of jumping straight to psychiatric intervention, the doctors shifted gears and started treating her for the poisoning. Within hours, she began to stabilize, and by the next morning, her mood had lifted dramatically. The staff later shared that moments like this highlight how physical health and mental well-being can get tangled up in ways no one sees coming.

This incident sparked quiet conversations among medical professionals about the need to check for underlying causes in young patients showing signs of distress. While it’s just one story, it served as a stark reminder that sometimes, what looks like an emotional breakdown could stem from something as straightforward as a hidden health problem. The girl went home a few days later, her family relieved, and everyone involved a bit wiser for the experience.