As authorities attempt to find answers on American deaths in the Dominican Republic, dozens of U.S. tourists have come out to share their stories about becoming ill while visiting the Carribean nation.
Among those was Natalie Stanley who said she and her husband had to cut their trip short due to Stanley falling ill two days after arriving at their resort on June 9.
According to the news broadcaster, Stanley had a mixed drink at dinner, while her husband had a beer.
“I told him that there was something seriously wrong with me because I was shaking uncontrollably,” Stanley said.
“My jaw started clinching and then my pupils were really dilated. Like every 30 minutes I had to run to the bathroom. My husband was like are you really shaking that bad, I’m like yes,” she added.
Similarly, in April, several members of a Michigan family who traveled to the Dominican Republic for Spring break became violently ill after returning from the country.
Muschong’s 17-year-old son, Evan, also became sick while on the trip.
“I kind of thought I was invincible,” Evan told the news station. “My parents warned me about it like, ‘listen, don’t drink the water, don’t do anything like that.’ But I continued to drink the water.”
Muschong said he was diagnosed with E Coli, meanwhile, his son never received an official diagnosis.
In another case, a Florida man became severely ill while in the country.
The symptoms not only ruined the rest of his trip, they never went away after returning to the United States. He went to the emergency room after landing back home and has since been back five times in the last few weeks.
“I am scared, honestly. It’s my health,” he told the news broadcaster.
Martin was not able to tell whether his illness is linked with the other cases that have emerged in the media in the past two weeks but his experience has caused him to become more cautious about going to the country and traveling outside the United States.
Autopsies for some of the victims have indicated heart attacks and pulmonary edema, or fluid build-up in the lungs. Several victims have been found dead in their hotel rooms while others were with a loved one after drinking from the minibar in their rooms before collapsing.
The suspicious deaths started in June 2018 and have continued into June 2019.
“Healthy people don’t just die. And the couple dying at the same time certainly tips us off that something is very wrong,” he said.