guard to figure out how to give better medical care to these migrants after they re taken into u.s. custody. but this is a crisis we re being told with no end in sight. the heartbreaking cation of the 8-year-old guatemalan boy who died from the flu is raising more questions about medical care at the border. cnn s elizabeth cohn explains. what rather learning is autopsy showed this little boy had the flu. when he went to get help, he had symptoms of the flu, yet he wasn t tested. doctors say that was a great missed opportunity. if he d been tested, he could have been treated and potentially his life could have been saved. let s take a look at what happened the day that he died. at 1:20 in the afternoon, customs and border protection found he had possible symptoms so they took him into the
elizabeth cohn has more story. reporter: death, despair. the plague of ebola ravaging liberia. in the midst of this horror, a remarkable story of lives saved by this young woman. growing up in the poverty stricken town of kochthe liberia, she s been surrounded by disease and death. that s why she always wanted to make a difference to become a nurse. three years ago, fatu enrolled in nursing school. i don t like to see people suffer. and i really want to become a nurse now. we help people save the life of my fellow liberiians. reporter: fatu never imagined
virus, thousands have died so far. when a young woman saw her father turned away from overcrowded hospitals, she decided to treat him herself. armed with nothing more than plastic bags, some rain boots and stockings for protection, she managed to save three infected family members. elizabeth cohn has her story. reporter: death, despair. the plague of ebola ravaging liberia. in the midst of this horror, a remarkable story of lives saved by this young woman. growing up in the poverty stricken town of kochthe liberia, she s been surrounded by disease and death.
reporting. elizabeth, thank you. this outrage is not going anywhere because there is now an online petition for parents of kids who have heart defects to try to get this hospital to release its numbers. coming up, a beauty queen under arrest for allegedly tossing a homemade bomb. you heard me, bombs at homes in a salt lake city suburb. why? what was she really up to? and could she face jail time? that s next. a community wide program that offers free classes that inspire families to get out, enjoy moving together, and even track their activity online. it s part of our goal to inspire more than three million people to rediscover the joy of being active this summer. see the difference all of us can make. together. these chevys are moving fast. i ll take that malibu. yeah excuse me, the equinox in atlantis blue is mine!
privacy. what of dr. plunket? he resigned and he has a new job at the university of florida doing the same surgeries. kentucky children s hospital says after an internal review they will start doing heart surgeries again. karpf says this time he ll make sure the program is top notch but these parents say as long as the death rate remains a secret, it s not safe for any child to have heart surgery at kentucky children s. i m standing up for the ones who have lost their kids, the moms that i ve had to stand in the hallway with and try to console because they lost their children and they don t know what s happened and there s still no answers given to them. i said, it s scary to think that maybe, you know, the reason that they had been shut down could have been prevented and our child could have still been here today. reporter: elizabeth cohn, cnn