INQUEST FINDS FAILING BY NHS TRUST CONTRIBUTED TO DEATH OF 35-YEAR-OLD MAN FROM RYDE – Island Echo

Posted: Published on July 16th, 2022

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

An inquest into the death of a 35-year-old father of 2 from Ryde has heard that there were a series of mistakes made in his care by Isle of Wight NHS Trust which significantly contributed to his death over 3 years ago.

Steven Hasler, who left behind 2 young daughters, was found dead at home on 14th February 2019. His death came just months after he had open-heart surgery at Southampton General Hospital to replace a defective heart valve which had been present since birth but had only recentlystarted to cause him difficulties.

While the surgery in November 2018 went well, after returning home tothe Isle of Wight, Stevenfelt that his chest wound was not healing properly and noticed worrying signs such as largeamounts of blood and pus coming from the wound.

Due to his concerns,Steven attended A&E at St Marys Hospitalin the evening of 7th December2018. He was seen by various doctors including a senior general surgeon, and it wasnoted that he had developed a bacterial infection of his chest woundfollowing recent open-heart surgeryand had been experiencing shakes and shivers, which can be a sign of infection in the blood. Blood tests were also carried out that evening and revealed a very high C-reactive Protein (CRP) level, a marker of inflammation.

At the inquest last week, on 6th and 7th July 2022, Coroner Caroline Sumeray heard that whilst a healthy persons CRP level wouldtypicallybe under 5mg/L, Stevens CRP level on 7th December was 70 times higher at 350mg/L, having risen from 255 mg/L the previous week.Thatindicated Stevensbody was battling a significant infection and given his recent open-heart surgery, this was a complication which required specialist management under the cardiac surgeons.

The inquest heard that whilst the senior general surgeon who saw Steven recognised that the infection was outside of his expertise and that advice from cardiac surgeons was needed, with no cardiac surgery unit on the Island, he did not make the necessary telephone call because it was late at night and he did not want to wake the on-call cardiac surgeon at Southampton, which the coroner described as an error of judgment. Instead, he decided to ask his colleagues on the day shift the next morning to do so. In the meantime, Steven was discharged home after just 1 dose of intravenous antibiotics and given a 7-day course oftablet antibiotics.

What followed was a series of further errors which meant that the cardiac surgeons never became aware of the infection: the day team never contacted them despite written instructions on a handover sheet to do so, the senior general surgeon never chased it up and there were no systems in place at the Trust to ensure the necessary action had been taken. To make matters worse, the Discharge Summary sent from A&E to Stevens GP practice, described as woefully inadequate by the Trusts medical director, made no mention of the CRP results or the plan to contact Southampton. This meant that yet another opportunity, which would have allowed Stevens GPs to rectify the failure to contact the specialists at Southampton, was missed.

Tragically, the independent cardiac surgery expert instructed by the coroner told the inquest that, if the cardiac surgeonsat Southamptonhad been made aware of Stevens infection, they would have arranged for urgent admission to Southampton Hospital for treatment with prolonged intravenous antibiotics and surgery to clean the wound and remove infected tissue, which would likely have prevented his death.

Instead, the limited antibiotics he receivedhad little chance of resolving such a severe infection and, on 14th February 2019, Steven was found dead at home by Police. A post-mortem examination determined that the cause ofhisdeath was widespread sepsis due to endocarditis,aninfection of the inner lining of the heart, and a periaortic leak/perforation which developed as a complication of his valve replacement for heart valve disease three months earlier.

At the inquest, the Trust told the coroner that, since Stevens death,they have put in place measures to ensuremoreeffective handoverofinformation between staff on different shifts and emphasised to general surgical staff the potential dangers of chest wound infections following open-heart surgery. They are also working on ensuring discharge summaries sent to GPs include all of the key information from each A&E attendance, including planned next steps.

The coroner concluded that there were incomplete handovers of Stevens medical care at St Marys Hospital and a failure to recognise the seriousness of his condition on 7th December 2018 which significantly contributed to his death. She also concluded that, had a suitably comprehensive discharge summary been given to Stevens GP, that would also have likely led to onward referral to Southampton for appropriate treatment.

Stevensfamily wererepresented by Rebecca Ridgeon, solicitor at Leigh Day, and Sebastian Naughton, barrister at Serjeants Inn.

Following the inquest, Stevens family said:

We were all aware of Steves underlying heart condition since he was born, but he never let it hold him back and, for most of his life, Steve was the fittest and strongest person we knew. He was the comedian of five siblings and made everyone around him laugh.

When he started to get some symptoms from his heart condition and was told he needed open-heart surgery in 2018, Steve was very nervous, but he knew it was important to go ahead with the operation to get him back on his feet so that he could continue being an active Dad to his two kids, who meant the absolute world to him.

We were relieved that the surgery seemed to go well, but Steve never got the chance to look after his children again because his chest wound struggled to heal and the infection was not properly treated.

His death at such a young age came as a huge shock to the whole family and we feel he was badly let down by the doctors he saw at St Marys Hospital on 7 December 2018.

Over three years later, we are pleased that the coroner and the Trust have recognised the errors which contributed to his death and, whilst it will not bring him back, we are glad that as a result, it seems that measures are being taken to improve medical services for other patients on the island.

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INQUEST FINDS FAILING BY NHS TRUST CONTRIBUTED TO DEATH OF 35-YEAR-OLD MAN FROM RYDE - Island Echo

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