Take Care - Of Maya _hot_
But when Maya arrived at Johns Hopkins, the medical team grew skeptical. They saw a mother administering high doses of medication. They saw a child screaming in pain. And rather than looking at the rare neurological disease, they began to look at the relationship between mother and daughter.
On a Friday afternoon in November 2016, the state of Florida, acting on the hospital’s recommendation, removed Maya from her parents' custody. The courts issued a "no contact" order. Beata and Jack were not allowed to see, call, or even FaceTime their daughter. Maya, who was only ten years old, was now a ward of the state, trapped on the 10th floor of the hospital, surrounded by guards and strangers. Take Care of Maya
The hospital alleged that Maya did not have CRPS. They claimed Beata was poisoning and manipulating Maya, and that the child was a victim of medical child abuse. But when Maya arrived at Johns Hopkins, the
Isolated from her parents, Maya deteriorated rapidly. Deprived of her ketamine protocol—which the hospital refused to administer—her CRPS flared to unimaginable levels. The documentary shows footage of Maya writhing in a hospital bed, screaming for her mother, while nurses looked on. She lost the ability to walk. She stopped eating. And rather than looking at the rare neurological