Natasha Lechner had just taken part in a purging ritual minutes before she died in her home in March 2019.
That day, in Mullumbimby, NSW, the 39-year-old had Kambo, a poison derived from the Amazonian giant tree frog, applied to five small burns on her chest and arm, an inquest has heard.
The ritual is claimed to supposedly rid the body of toxins and sees participants apply the poison to small dot-like burns on their skin to induce vomiting.
Moments after the poison was applied, Lechner, who had trained as a Kambo practitioner two months earlier, fainted.
"She sat up and grabbed my arm and just looked at me and said: 'It’s not good'," Victoria Sinclair, who took part in the ritual, told an inquest this week, according to The Guardian.
"She then fainted sitting up."
Sinclair reportedly administered CPR. However, she did not have a phone nor did she know the number of emergency services.
A flatmate returned home shortly after and called an ambulance.
But by the time it arrived five minutes later, Lechner had died and was unable to be revived, according to the ABC.
Four years later, a coronial inquest is now investigating whether the ritual caused Lechner's sudden death.
According to the ABC, the court heard the most likely cause of death was an acute cardiac event.
Medical Director at the NSW Poisons Information Centre, Associate Professor Darren Roberts, said Kambo likely played a role in the 39-year-old's death.
"Tash had a perfect heart, there was no evidence of heart disease," he said, as per the publication.
At the time of Lechner's death, the use of Kambo was legal in NSW. However, it was later banned in Australia by the Therapeutic Goods Administration in 2021.
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