
The daughter of one of the cricket players in Glamorgan and England could be rescued if she received the correct treatment, and an investigation heard.
Bethan James, 21, from Cardiff, died on February 9, 2020 and found a post -death examination that the cause of her death was a mixture of poisoning, pneumonia and Crohn's disease.
The investigation of the PontypriddD Coroner court listened to the fact that it was diagnosed with Crohn in the previous months.
Providing evidence on the first day of the investigation, Bethan Jin James's mother told the court that she felt that the medical staff had lost opportunities to treat her due to blood rot.
The session was told that Mrs. James was accepted to the hospital on a number of occasions on the days before her death.
Jane James said she felt that doctors and nursing staff were rejecting her daughter's condition.

She was accepted to the hospital on February 8 after her condition worsen and died the next day.
Her mother told the investigation that at any time the possibility of mentioning her daughter was blood.
The investigation heard that Bethan was treated by a paramedic and then at the Wales University Hospital in Cardiff.
Mrs. James said that she felt that her daughter could have saved her if the employees gave her the appropriate care and treatment for the two, adding that it could have been saved.
Pethan's father is Steve James, who was born in Glosterchire and first appeared in Glamorgan in 1985.
He played with England twice in 1998 before announcing his retirement in 2004 after a knee injury for a long time and is now a Times journalist.
The investigation continues.