HomeCrimeNeglected Foster Child's Serious Bowel Issue Mistaken for Flu: Lawsuit Claims

Neglected Foster Child’s Serious Bowel Issue Mistaken for Flu: Lawsuit Claims

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Inset: Alexander Howard (Facebook/Katie McIntosh). Background: The Dayton Children’s Hospital in Ohio that Alex Howard’s mother, Katie McIntosh, wanted to take him to before he died from a bowel blockage (Google Maps).

In a tragic turn of events in Ohio, a 4-year-old foster child named Alexander Howard succumbed to a deadly bowel blockage, which was initially dismissed as flu symptoms by family services caseworkers. According to a lawsuit filed by Alex’s mother, Katie McIntosh, the Preble County Jobs & Family Services warned her against taking her son to the emergency room, even threatening to revoke her “parental rights” if she did so.

Katie McIntosh, convinced that her son was suffering from a condition far more severe than the flu, found her pleas ignored by the caseworkers, as detailed in her legal complaint. Despite her insistence, the agency advised that it was unnecessary to seek emergency medical attention for Alex.

Alex tragically passed away in February 2025 after battling symptoms such as vomiting and diarrhea for weeks—symptoms his mother felt warranted immediate medical care. During this period, Alex lived with foster parents but was allowed “overnight visitations” with McIntosh, who noticed troubling signs during these visits.

Alongside Alex, another of McIntosh’s children was in foster care, and during their visits, she reportedly observed alarming conditions. The children appeared “covered with a filthy crust,” and Alex bore a “coat hanger bruise” that alarmed his mother enough to seek medical attention at Dayton Children’s Hospital in Montgomery County.

This action, deemed “unauthorized” by Preble County Jobs & Family Services for lacking their prior approval, resulted in McIntosh’s visitation rights being altered. The lawsuit states that her overnight visits with Alex and his sibling were restricted to supervised sessions as a consequence.

McIntosh’s overnight visitation rights were restored in November 2024 but she continued to observe “ailments” that she believed “warranted” medical treatment.

“Over the course of the evening of December 20, 2024, the health of Alex and [the sibling] deteriorated: Alex complained that his belly hurt, and he vomited,” the complaint says.

Alex’s vomiting and symptoms continued into the next day, and Katie brought him to a medical facility in Eaton. When family services found out about this, a caseworker told McIntosh that her overnight visitations were terminated once again and “further warned Katie she had placed herself in jeopardy of losing all parental rights,” the complaint alleges.

McIntosh says she “refrained” from seeking or procuring medical care for Alex “fearing that she would lose all parental rights if she did so,” per the complaint.

Alex told her during one supervised visit at the end of December 2024 that he had vomited and “complained of belly pain,” according to the complaint. He also allegedly had “bed bug bites” on his body.

In mid-January 2025, Alex once again complained of “belly pain and vomiting” and “fresh bruises” were visible on his body, according to the complaint. “Alex’s lower abdominal flesh and genital area flesh was discolored,” the complaint says. “He could not urinate comfortably. A large blood clot was found to have been discharged in Alex’s urine.”

At the end of January 2025, Alex was still suffering from the same symptoms and stated during a visit that he was “really hungry,” per the complaint. His foster parents allegedly said his sibling was taken to the children’s hospital and diagnosed with influenza, but Alex was not.

One of Alex’s caseworkers told McIntosh on Jan. 31, 2025, that her visitation scheduled for Feb. 1, 2025, was cancelled because both Alex and his sibling had been “suffering from the flu,” according to the complaint.

“Katie, based upon her personal observations and statements made by Alex, insisted that Alex was suffering from a condition which was far more serious than the flu,” the complaint reiterates. “She questioned why Alex had not been taken to Children’s Hospital simultaneously with [the sibling], and insisted that Alex be taken to an emergency room.”

Alex wound up dying at the children’s hospital on Feb. 8, 2025, “due to a blockage in his small bowel which caused necrosis of his bowel,” according to the complaint. Doctors allegedly said the necrosis had “persisted for seven or more days, resulting in diverticulitis, sepsis, and ultimately, cardiac arrest.”

“In the weeks preceding his death, Alex endured conscious pain and suffering as a consequence of the blockage in his small bowel,” the complaint concludes.

A police report included with the complaint says Alex’s foster parents notified authorities on the day he died about him suffering from “a little bit of a stomach issue.” One of the parents said, “Right now he’s looking really pale,” according to the report.

“Snot is just pouring out, or is that throw up, I don’t know? It’s clear liquid,” the parent said. “It’s coming out of his nose, I’m unsure if it’s snot or maybe throw up. … Oh my God, it’s pouring out his nose.”

EMS was called and Alex was taken to the children’s hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Police determined that Alex died of natural causes and there was no criminal liability found in the case.

McIntosh is suing Preble County Job & Family Services, as well as the caseworkers.

Attorneys for Preble County have said in court filings that the allegations being made by McIntosh are “based on facts not reasonably known until later, and are based on 20-20 hindsight for which these defendants are not liable.”

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