Firstly we have to look at the case scenario. Mr. James was horribly wounded in a motor vehicle misadventure with Mr. Olson, who was not injured. James was fetched into the Memorial Hospital in a sombre condition. Dr. Swanson ran on him. After the performance the enduring qualified paralysis on the left boundary of his body. Upon studying of the patient's relative standing, Swanson cited him to Swedish Hospital, where Swanson is a shareholder. Swedish is well famous for its therapy of victims of paralysis.
At Swedish, Mr. James became so downcast over his paralysis that he productively endeavoured suicide. Apparently James had advised the intern in accuse at Swedish, Ms. Iverson, about his depression. Ms. Iverson was highly supportive to James' situation. She advised her acquaintance, who is a intern at another infirmary, about James' plight. James dedicated suicide by taking a large dose of painkillers, which were left close to his bed. It is unclear how the painkillers came to be in his room. James did not have any sightseers at Swedish and he had his own room. Obviously, he was bed-ridden. Only hospitals and interns were sanctioned into his room. No painkillers were prescribed for James. Upon hearing of James' death, Olson fell and was taken to Grinnell Hospital. Olson was in and out of consciousness as he moved into the hospital. The intake someone requested him for indemnity information. Olson showed that he didn't have any indemnity and then fainted. The intake someone instructed the field infirmary operator to take the enduring to Mercy Hospital because they "handled indigent patients like Olson." Olson deceased on road to Mercy Hospital. It afterwards turned out that Olson had deceased of a stroke.