Posted by By Khalil Maycock May 23, 2024 on May 27th 2024

Brunswick childcare facility shut down after 16-month-old dies from choking

Brunswick childcare facility shut down after 16-month-old dies from choking

Family seeks answers after learning facility had issues with first aid, CPR training
The Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning (DECAL) issued an emergency closure Thursday for a Brunswick, Georgia, childcare facility two days after a 16-month-old died.

Jamal Bryant Jr. choked after he ate a watermelon. He was taken to the hospital, where he died on Tuesday.

His parents are devastated and want answers.

“It feels like I’m living a nightmare that I cannot wake up from. I cannot wake up from this. And a part of me does not believe this is happening to me,” his mother Taylor Hicks said.

Hicks said she and her partner, Jamal Bryant, received the call from The Kids Nest Learning Center on Benedict Road, asking them to rush to the hospital.

Hicks said she never gave her son watermelon.

“I don’t even buy watermelon,” Hicks said. “She got the doctor, doctor to sit us down and Once he told me to sit down, I already knew what happened.”

Staff at the facility tried to help Bryant before he was taken to the hospital, according to police. But that’s something the family questions.

According to Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning (DECL) Inspection reports, the facility has faced a few problems, especially in first aid and CPR.

A report from October 13, 2023, shows“ staff members #3, #10, and #22 did not complete CPR and First Aid training within the first 90 days of employment as required.”

They were placed on an improvement plan with a correction deadline of November 13, 2023.

In an inspection report from April, under first aid and CPR, it’s labeled “defer” and goes on to talk about another plan of improvement for the childcare provider.

News4JAX asked the DECL what that report meant.

The department said, in part, “First Aid and CPR was deferred because during follow-up visits, we do not evaluate all rules. It would be evaluated at the next unannounced regulatory visit (licensing study or monitoring visit).”

We also reached out to the childcare facility but did not receive a comment.

The family said they wished they had known about the problems the learning center had before they placed their son in its care.

Now, they want justice.

”That’s what we want going forward. Like just make sure this doesn’t happen to another child again and to make sure whatever they do on their end to make sure everyone has the right certification,” Bryant said.

The family has also hired an attorney.

The childcare facility has 48 hours to appeal DECAL’s emergency closure before an administrative law judge.

If not appealed, the center will remain closed, and DECAL will have a maximum of 21 days to continue its investigation.