Hospital Staff Fail To Administer Antibiotics Promptly To Dying Patient

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Hospital Staff Fail To Administer Antibiotics Promptly To Dying Patient
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An inquest heard that staff at Homerton University Hospital in east London failed to administer antibiotics swiftly to William Hewes, who died within 24 hours of being admitted with sepsis. Hewes' mother, a consultant paediatrician at the hospital, repeatedly raised the alarm about her son's need for antibiotics, but they were not administered for over an hour.

A hospital medical staff failed to swiftly administer antibiotics to the son of a senior doctor who was showing signs of sepsis, an inquest has heard. William Hewes, aged 22, died at Homerton University Hospital in east London in January 2023 within 24 hours of being admitted after his meningitis, caused by a meningococcal infection, developed into sepsis. Mr Hewes, a history and politics student, was described as fit and healthy before the infection.

His inquest at Bow Coroner's Court heard evidence on Thursday from several medical staff on duty when the student died.Deborah Burns, Mr Hewes' mother, is a consultant paediatrician at Hackney hospital and has been a doctor there for over 20 years. According to the family's lawyers, they believe the hospital failed to ensure antibiotics were administered to Mr Hewes within an hour of his arrival, as per national guidelines, despite Dr Burns repeatedly raising the alarm that he needed them and had not received them. The inquest heard Mr Hewes arrived at the hospital at 00:06 GMT, was admitted to the resuscitation area (resus) and received antibiotics at about 01:25.Rebecca McMillan, the emergency medicine registrar that night, became emotional as she told the coroner what she would have done differently, stating that from the moment she saw Mr Hewes, she believed he might die. She said she told nurses working in resus about the type and dose of antibiotics he needed but admitted: 'I don't know that I was clear who I was directing my instruction to.' She left resus at 00:42 and told the court she would have expected the antibiotics to be administered within 10 minutes of her departure. 'I do recall standing outside the resus room with where she asked if I was OK and said that I looked really upset when I realised that antibiotics had not been given,' Dr McMillan said. 'We had a conversation along the lines of we didn't understand how this had happened. We were both upset when we realised that this hadn't happened.' Neil Sheldon KC, representing Dr Burns, asked Dr McMillan whether it was 'common practice' to issue a warning to 'a room at large' that a patient needed antibiotics. Struggling to get her words out, and looking up at the court ceiling, she replied: 'Absolutely not... I want to believe that in other circumstances and in my normal practices that my communication would be clear.' She told the court she had a recollection of one of the nurses telling her they would be giving Mr Hewes antibiotics but that she could not recall who. Coroner Mary Hassell earlier relayed some of Ms Balatico's previous evidence to the court in which she explained she had not been told which antibiotics to give and concentrated on relieving Mr Hewes's symptoms. Luke Brown, senior charge nurse on the night in question, told the court on Thursday that he had 'assumed' his team had given Mr Hewes antibiotics and he did not at any point ask them about whether they had administered the medicine. The inquest heard he agreed that in a case of suspected sepsis, antibiotics should be administered as soon as possible and, in any case, at the latest within an hour. The nurse told the court he trusted the team he left in charge, including Ms Balatico who was a band-five nurse, to escalate matters if they needed to, but added: 'It is disappointing that they didn't speak to me on that night.' Asked if he heard Dr Burns repeatedly asking nursing staff whether they were giving her son antibiotics, and telling them that he needed them urgently, Mr Brown said: 'No, I didn't hear that.' On what he has learned, he said: 'In hindsight, I would have gone in there within 60 minutes to make sure that antibiotics had been given and just check in with the resuscitation team.' The inquest heard he agreed that he would now be more vigilant because of what had happened to Mr Hewes but also explained that he had had 60-80 other patients to look after on the night

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