An effort to license and regulate hyperbaric oxygen chambers in Michigan appears to be picking up momentum after the death of ...
Troy police say Tamela Peterson ran away when asked for her cellphone after Thomas Cooper died in a hyperbaric chamber fire at the Oxford Center.
Daily Press & Argus (Livingston County) on MSN14d
After child's death, Oxford confirms hyperbaric treatments have halted in BrightonWhen asked by The Daily whether hyperbaric treatments are still being offered in Brighton, an employee responded, "Not at this time." ...
Here's what we know so far about the hyperbaric chamber death of 5-year-old Thomas Cooper, the Oxford Center, and the people charged in his death.
Tamela Peterson, founder and CEO of the Brighton-based Oxford Center; Gary Marken, executive director of operations; and ...
BRIGHTON — After the fiery death of a five-year-old boy in Troy, and the ensuing charges filed against Oxford Center CEO Tamela Peterson and other officials, the organization's location in ...
When patients die, CEOs rarely get charged. Why it’s different in the Oxford Center case. The state’s pursuit of murder ...
A transcript of a Troy detective’s testimony to an Oakland County District Court magistrate sheds light on the Jan. 31 explosion at the Oxford Center. Thomas Cooper, 5, of Royal Oak, was ...
Tamela Peterson, the CEO of the Oxford Center (which has locations in Brighton and Troy), ran away from detectives when they asked for her cellphone and had her son scrub her laptop days after 5 ...
The explosion happened shortly before 8 a.m. on Jan. 31 at The Oxford Center at 165 Kirts Blvd. The center, which has a second location in Brighton, offered hyperbaric oxygen therapy for a ...
The hyperbaric chambers at the Troy and Brighton Oxford Center facilities have not been used since the explosion and will continue not to be utilized, Peterson's attorney Gerald Gleeson said.
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