£410k payout for C-section death in hospital

September 29th, 2009

£410k payout for C-section death in hospital

A family has been awarded £410,000 in compensation after a woman died due to errors during a caesarean section.

Joanne Lockham, 45, had been admitted to Stoke Mandeville Hospital at Aylesbury in October 2007 and staff made the decision to give her a caesarean when her baby’s heartbeat dropped.

The patient was put under a general anaesthetic, but doctors mistakenly inserted the oxygen tube into her oesophagus and not her windpipe. She was deprived of oxygen for half an hour and her heart stopped a minute after the baby was born.

Ms Lockham’s life support was turned off two days later.

Her husband Peter decided to sue Buckinghamshire Hospitals NHS Trust after it admitted liability for the death and for "serious failings" in Ms Lockham’s care.

Mr Justice Burnett has now approved a compensation settlement of £410,000 for the loss and to cover the long-term care needs of the baby.

According to Babycentre.co.uk, approximately one in four pregnant women gives birth by caesarean every year.

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Nottingham family paid £150k compensation following misdiagnosis

September 7th, 2009

Nottingham family paid £150k compensation following misdiagnosis

Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust has paid £150,000 compensation to the family of a man who died after staff failed to diagnose a serious heart condition.

David Whittaker, 61, died after suffering a torn artery, a condition known as aortic dissection.

However, staff at Queen’s Medical Centre failed to spot this when he went to the hospital after complaining of chest pains.

Staff carried out some tests on Mr Whittaker, but did not undertake an electrocardiogram – a scan which may have identified the condition and enabled doctors to treat it appropriately.

He was discharged from hospital, but died the following day.

Mr Whittaker’s widow pursued a medical negligence claim against the trust, which admitted there had been shortcomings in his treatment and agreed a settlement, which included the six-figure compensation payout.

"[The settlement] accepts that an inappropriate failure to diagnose and treat her late husband’s aortic dissection on July 24th 2006 and that, had appropriate treatment been provided, her late husband would probably have survived," a spokesman for Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust said.

News of the payout comes just weeks after the NHS Litigation Authority revealed the NHS spent £807 million to settle compensation claims in 2008-09.ADNFCR-1694-ID-19348046-ADNFCR

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Blunder rate in Cumbrian hospitals ‘is among UK’s highest’

August 19th, 2009

Blunder rate in Cumbrian hospitals is among UKs highest

The rate of clinical errors in Cumbria’s two hospitals is among the highest in the country, it has been revealed.

Statistics released this week have shown that £5.3 million was paid out to the victims of clinical negligence by North Cumbria Acute Hospitals NHS Trust in 2008-09, the News and Star reports.

One woman who said she is not surprised by the news is Charlene Steel, whose baby suffered a brain injury because of errors at his birth at Cumberland Infirmary. She said she would travel elsewhere if she needed to use hospital services again.

This comes after figures for the UK as a whole showed that clinical negligence payouts reached £807 million last year, up by 22 per cent on the figure from 2007-08.

There were 8,885 claims brought against NHS trusts for medical blunders, it was found.

Anyone affected by errors during their hospital treatment should seek the advice of a solicitor specialising in clinical negligence claims.

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Couple sue after baby’s scalp is detached during birth

July 16th, 2009

Couple sue after babys scalp is detached during birth

A couple are seeking legal action against an NHS trust after their baby was delivered so forcefully that part of his scalp detached.

Charlene Steel and Robin Heslop – the baby’s parents – claim they had pleaded with staff at Cumberland Infirmary to perform a Caesarean section following two hours of difficult labour, the News and Star reports.

However, medics continued to try to use a ventouse cap to pull the baby out.

When baby Bobbie was born, his head was bleeding and his parents fear he may have brain damage.

"The midwife was pulling so hard the veins on her arms stuck out," commented Mr Heslop.

Ms Steel believes that doctors should have recognised the traumatic labour and should have given her a Caesarean section. They have now taken legal action against North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust for negligence.

The trust declined to comment while the case goes through the appropriate legal channels.

According to BabyCentre.co.uk, rates of Caesarean delivery in the UK vary from place to place; in some locations it is as low as 13 to 15 per cent, while in others it may be 25 to 30 per cent.
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£1.3m payout for girl with cerebral palsy

July 15th, 2009

ٟ.3m payout for girl with cerebral palsy

A girl who suffers from cerebral palsy after being the victim of what was later described as a "negligent birth" has been awarded a multi-million pound compensation settlement.

Abigail Thomas, now six, was born at St Mary’s Hospital in Portsmouth, but errors by medical staff meant that she was starved of oxygen.

She went on to develop quadriplegic cerebral palsy and now needs constant care to deal with her physical impairments, the Portsmouth News reports.

Through her mother Jacqueline, Abigail sued Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust for clinical negligence. It admitted liability and has now agreed to a compensation settlement of £1.3 million.

This will cover the cost of carers for Abigail, including a night-time helper to relieve her parents.

Nick Block, spokesperson for the NHS trust, said: "We hope that this settlement will provide financial security and help to lift the family’s burden."

According to Scope, there has been a slight increase in the proportion of children who have cerebral palsy in recent years – approximately one in every 400 children is affected.
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