A doctor did not know stay sutures had been
used, the coroner said |
Lessons will be learned after surgery on a toddler
went wrong at a Brighton hospital, an NHS trust has said.
It follows an inquest where the coroner said the death of
20-month-old Indya Trevelyan was by medical misadventure.
She died in April after surgery at the Royal Alexandra Children's
Hospital. The coroner said a doctor did not have knowledge of
sutures that was needed.
Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust said it was
looking at the implications of the verdict.
After the inquest, Matthew Fletcher, medical director at the NHS
Trust said: "This type of catastrophic incident changes the way we
practise medicine and we will do everything we can to ensure the
same sequence of events can never happen again.
"Our thoughts and sympathies continue to be with Indya's parents
and family."
'Rare operation'
Outside the coroner's court, Indya's father, Nigel Trevelyan said
he and his wife, who live in Pease Pottage, West Sussex, were
considering legal action.
He said: "Losing our lovely daughter was devastating, but
discovering that her death was preventable was unbearable."
Indya's mother, Sian, said: "I just want to get back to
remembering Indya as she was, and remember her life rather than her
death."
The inquest heard that Indya was admitted with a severe cough and
breathing problems caused by the respiratory illness, croup, and
paediatricians inserted a breathing tube.
Indya's parents said they were considering
legal action |
But after the surgeons had left the operating theatre, on-call
doctor Dr David Campbell did not recognise a technique that had been
used to stitch the tube to Indya's chest.
When it came loose he pulled it off, ripping stitches from her
body, the inquest was told.
Dr Campbell alerted the other surgeons, but Indya suffered a
cardio-respiratory arrest and died the next day.
Coroner John Hooper said: "What was critical at this point was
the need for knowledge of the presence of stay sutures.
"Dr Campbell did not have that knowledge. He did not have the
experience of stay sutures and having arrived later to the scene did
not have the benefit of seeing Dr MacDonald use them.
"None of the consultants thought to ask Dr Campbell if he knew
about the stay sutures and their purpose, or to tell him what they
were there for before leaving Dr Campbell with any eventuality that
might arise during the post-operative period."
He added: "It would have been helpful if at least one of them had
remained during the waking-up period."
'Best interests'
Mr Hooper said the operation was a very rare one to be used
outside specialist hospitals in London, but staff at the Royal
Alexandra Children's Hospital had no choice but to go through with
it.
But he added: "It is clear from the evidence that when the
consultants embarked on the events that have been described, they
did so with Indya's best interests in mind."
Mr Hooper said he would be writing a letter to the NHS Trust
under Section 43 of the Coroner's Act, expressing his concern of the
risk of other deaths occurring in a similar way in the future.
Indya died from multiple organ failure at Evelina Children's
Hospital in London, where she was moved to after the operation in
Brighton.
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