Boy, 11, dies after falling ill at Jewish camp in Pennsylvania
“There are no words to describe the sudden loss of a young life, and everyone in the New Jersey Y Camps community is grieving the passing of Daniel Beer.”
By JTAUpdated: JULY 12, 2017 12:07
An 11-year-old boy attending a Jewish summer camp in New Jersey died after being hospitalized for what camp staff described as “gastrointestinal symptoms.”Daniel Beer of Norwood, New Jersey, was a camper at Camp Nah-Jee-Wah in Milford, Pa., when he died on July 10 at Bon Secours Community Hospital in Port Jervis, New York.The camp is part of New Jersey Y Camps.“There are no words to describe the sudden loss of a young life, and everyone in the New Jersey Y Camps community is grieving the passing of Daniel Beer,” camp administrators said in a prepared statement, adding, “Our thoughts and prayers are with Daniel and his family.” The camp brought in grief counselors for campers and staff.State police are investigating the boy’s death. “There is nothing suspicious at this point but we treat every death with concern, especially that of an 11-year-old boy, and work backward to rule everything out,” Mark Keyes, a public information officer for the Pennsylvania State Police, told New Jersey Jewish News. By Tuesday afternoon, the cause of death was not confirmed, but carbon monoxide poisoning, trauma and physical injury had all been ruled out, according to Keyes.An email to parents, signed by NJY Camps executive director Leonard Robinson and Nah-Jee-Wah director Kari Grove, explained that Beer had “gastrointestinal symptoms overnight, was treated in our infirmary and was taken to the hospital this morning when the symptoms worsened suddenly.”Administrators were “waiting for the full medical report to determine why his illness elevated to this level so quickly,” according to the email.Daniel’s parents, Sam and Jill Beer, met camp administrators at the hospital.On his Facebook page, Daniel’s father posted a photo of himself with his son, who celebrated his 11th birthday on July 4.