 Someone drowns in a tub nearly every day in America. According to a Scripps Award News, service records from 1999 to 2003. Experts blame alcohol, other suspects homicide, and undetectable suicides. The pictures are of the 90-year-old man that was having a bath. He had something that looked like an oversized element from a kettle to help with keeping the water hot. Unfortunately, he died and was in the bath for over two weeks. With the water almost boiling, what you see on the left side of the lower picture are his legs. When trauma cleaners took hold of his legs to try and get some of him out of the bath, all the cat was a bone, and it simply slide out of the flesh. The following did the cleaners came in and scoop up almost 50kg of goop that made up his body. If you look closely at the picture, you can just make out the shape of a body. Obviously, the smell must have been horrible. Distinguishing the manner of death as natural or violent, the forensic investigation required a careful examination of the scene, in addition to autopsy and toxicology study. Carps, we women, found partially submerged in a bathtub at her home for four days. You might think she's pregnant but she's not. That's how her body decomposed if not found for some time. Our stomach bloated. The water level marks suggested the circumstances in which the body had remained after death. Alcohol, tobacco, and prescription drugs were present at the scene. She had history of alcohol dependence. No signs of violence by others or suicidal intent were found in the scene. Investigators distinguished her death as unintentional. To make sure the cause of her death, autopsy and toxicology tested high amount of alcohol in her system. While she was in the bathtub lying down, blood pressure record, she suffered autonomic dysfunction. It's a non-consequence of chronic and excessive alcohol consumption, leading her sudden carjap, death. Most of the deaths caused by heat shock were a sudden change in temperature experience when getting in or out of the bath rapidly changes a person's blood pressure, leading to a heart attack or another medical issues. A housewife was relaxing in her bathtub. But bad things happened and fire broke out. Falls and electrocution are the most common type of injury sustained in bathtub. Police found a woman submerging her bathtub. Unfortunately, there is no further details of what caused her death. But as what you see, there was a telephone cord also submerging the bathtub. It seemed she was on the phone, a possible cause of electrocution. A suspicious death of a man named Yi Li Yang who died in a bathtub. Hair dryer plugged into extension cord failed. A possible reasons of his death electrocution. A conspiracy theory I found online talking about the manner of his death is homicide. Stating that Yang's head and neck were twisted to his right side, the reasons he might be murdered. In addition, Yang wore his watch on his left hand. Weirdly and peacefully lay in the bathtub when he was washing his hair with a hair comb, towel and folded glasses lying under his feet, his hands put on his chest. In Japan, about 19,000 bathtub deaths annually. The death counts of course mostly in the winter season and 90% of deaths are elderly persons. According to a demographic statistics released by the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, a picture shows a boiled man. He was in the bathtub with a carbon monoxide from the heater, malfunction and drown. The water temperature in the bathtub was high and boiled in his corpse for 9 hours. As same as in Sao Anas, butting in hat-taps while drunk can also cause the body to become dehydrated. Many hotels post-warning outside Sao Anas, watching people not to go in if they have consumed a lot of alcohol. A drunk couple from suburban Chicago was enjoying their hot tub moment until it went wrong. When the husband accidentally trapped and drowned his wife, Eric Husko was arrested in his home and charged with the death of his wife, Laura. According to police, home security video showed the couple drinking in the hot tub at their home for some time before the distressed Laura unsuccessfully tried to get out. It also showed Eric initially trying to help his wife but then closing the tub's lid over her head. Eric returned to the tub about 90 minutes later, opened the lid, and found his wife floating in the water. Police and paramedics were summoned to the Husko's home. Laura was rushed to Glenbrick Hospital, where she was later pronounced dead. The medical examiner found the victim's manner of death to be drowning by entrapment. Police have yet to determine a motive but they say alcohol was a factor. Husko appeared in court and had his bail set at $10,000. Police said the husband had no prior criminal history and they had no record of service called to the Husko family's home and wheeling where the pair have lived since 2003. Eric's Facebook page was filled with romantic photos of him and his wife, including in their backyard hot tub. This tea composing individual about to sip a full glass of wine but died of natural causes while sitting in a warm tub. Note the bloating from putrefactive gases causing the body to float near the surface. The consumer affairs agency makes developing recommendations to avoid heat shock and bad safely. Do not take a bath immediately after eating or when there is still alcohol in your system.