25 Jan 2022

Multiple hospital staff failures in care of woman who died, inquiry finds

5:08 pm on 25 January 2022

The Health and Disability Commissioner says there were a slew of failures by junior staff at a Southern District Health Board hospital prior to the death of a woman in her sixties.

Counties Manukau Health says it has enacted special escalation plans, including cancelling elective surgery, to deal with a surge in patients visiting Middlemore Hospital's emergency department.

Photo: 123RF

The critically ill woman went to the emergency department with a possible pulmonary embolism - a blockage in an artery in the lungs, typically caused by a blood clot - in 2019.

A CT scan quickly confirmed she was suffering from a "massive" embolism, which significantly impacted her cardiovascular system.

But staff instead took a wait and see approach and considered using a treatment to dissolve blood clots.

"Although the woman was critically unwell, junior staff did not escalate her care to a senior medical officer, and she was not treated with anything other than fluids," Commissioner Morag McDowell said in a statement.

The woman died 17 hours after being admitted to hospital.

McDowell said staff did not treat the woman's condition critically, did not escalate her care to a senior medical officer, or begin the proper treatment to dissolve the women's blood clot when they should have.

She said the failures indicated a poor pattern of care and "a culture of non-compliance" with the DHB's rules.

"There were repeat failures involving numerous individuals across the ED and the respiratory team, and I consider this to be a service delivery failure for which, ultimately, SDHB is responsible."

The commissioner referred the Southern DHB to the Director of Proceedings to decide if further actions should be taken.

She also issued a number of recommendations to the SDHB:

  • Consider whether its guidelines for thrombolysis in patients with acute pulmonary embolism could be strengthened further to include specific reference to indicators of shock;
  • Use the report as an anonymised case study;
  • Review the medical staffing levels at the public hospital overnight to ensure that there is an adequate mix of skills and capacity to meet acuity of demand;
  • Consider the Australasian College of Emergency Medicine's Statement on 'Responsibility of Care in Emergency Departments' and use this to create its own guideline with regard to patients in ED awaiting inpatient beds;
  • Consider developing a policy and process to allow for increased supervision of resident medical officers during their first few weeks of a rotation;
  • Promote awareness or develop a process or pathway for nurses to contact senior doctors directly in appropriate circumstances.

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