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Arizona Woman Hospitalized with Third-Degree Burns After Falling Asleep Poolside
SAN TAN VALLEY, Ariz. — A relaxing afternoon by a community pool escalated into a life-threatening medical emergency after an elderly local resident fell asleep in the intense summer heat. Medical officials are using the near-fatal incident as a sobering reminder of the extreme dangers that ambient temperatures and exposed metal surfaces pose to vulnerable populations during peak summer months.
The victim, 82-year-old Betty-Lou Summer, was lounging poolside at her community recreation center in San Tan Valley on June 11, 2026, when she unexpectedly dozed off in the sun. On that particular afternoon, regional temperatures soared well past 105 degrees. Although she was only asleep for approximately one hour, the prolonged exposure combined with the thermal conductivity of her lounge chair's metal frame inflicted catastrophic damage.
Bystanders eventually discovered Summer unresponsive and heavily blistered on her lounge chair. Recognizing the immediate danger, neighbors covered her with wet towels, dragged her into the shade, and contacted emergency personnel. Paramedics rushed Summer to a nearby emergency room before she was transferred to the specialized burn unit at Valleywise Medical Center in Phoenix for intensive treatment. Upon arrival, Summer was in critical condition and in active organ failure, with a dangerously elevated core body temperature of 104 degrees that required her to be immediately placed on a ventilator.
As her liver and kidney functions slowly stabilized over the subsequent days, her extensive heat blisters developed into deep, full-thickness third-degree burns. Summer's daughter, Michelle Gabbert, who works as an internal medicine physician, noted that the metal lounge chair acted like a hot commercial grill wherever it came into contact with her mother's body. Summer sustained severe tissue damage across her front, abdomen, shoulders, and arms, completely losing the skin at the tip of her pinky finger and suffering deep burns down to the muscle layer along her shins and thighs.
Summer has already endured two specialized surgical procedures over the past two weeks to remove damaged tissue, but her medical team indicates she faces an incredibly long and painful road to recovery. Due to the thinning skin and lack of subcutaneous fat characteristic of older adults, finding enough healthy tissue for permanent skin grafts has proved exceptionally difficult. She is scheduled to undergo additional operations every four to five days to manage her pain levels and mitigate the severe risk of secondary infections, with her daughters noting she may never regain the ability to walk.
Her daughters, Michelle Gabbert and Rebecca Fletcher, are sharing their family's heartbreak to raise public awareness about the rapid onset of environmental heat illnesses. They emphasized that Summer was actually wearing a floppy sun hat and topical sunscreen at the time of her nap, which successfully shielded her face but could not prevent her core body from overheating or protect her skin from contact burns against the scorching metal chair. Medical experts urge residents to always check the temperature of outdoor furniture with the back of their hand before sitting down and to keep a hyper-vigilant eye on young children and elderly family members during extreme heat cycles.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 24, 2026


