I see what you are saying, although I don't know what medical treatment they had available to them. Surely they would have sought it? I read some more about this, and several sites say she "gained weight due to her disease," presumably in the last three weeks. To me, that sounds like maybe her kidney failure worsened, causing her to begin retaining a lot of fluid (people can live with even advanced kidney failure for years but you have to keep that water weight off--which I know you know, but in case anyone reading this isn't familiar with kidney failure, I'm mentioning it). My guess is that she had so much fluid that it began overwhelming her organ systems; that is how people die when their kidneys cease to properly function. Sometimes it happens really fast. My mom has kidney failure; she weighs herself every single day so that she can be on top of any excess fluid retention. But when she was in rehab after a fall last year, they screwed up her diuretics and nearly killed her in a very short time.
These people were traveling to and from a vacation home they owned in their native country. They'd probably made the trip dozens of times with no incidents, and that made them complacent. I do believe that after she was ejected from the first flight the airline tried to accommodate her. I just think they made a mistake by ejecting her from the first one. She was already on the plane. Perhaps she was still mobile? Sounds like it. But by the time they got done with all the airline waiting, it sounds like she was no longer mobile.
I definitely agree with you, after reading all that (and reading INTO it), that she should have been in a hospital at that point, not trying to board another plane. I wish a nurse or doctor had been around to assess the situation and tell her husband, "Sir, we need to get your wife help NOW. This is emergent." Just tragic all around.

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