Joyce Ravenhill
PFD Report
All Responded
Ref: 2016-wp25389
All 1 response received
· Deadline: 20 Oct 2016
Response Status
Responses
1 of 1
56-Day Deadline
20 Oct 2016
All responses received
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Organisations named in PFD reports must respond within 56 days explaining what actions they are taking.
Source: Courts and Tribunals Judiciary
Coroner’s Concerns
Although a summary of the first triage assessment on 26th December 2015 was available to the second triage nurse, there was no facility / operational policy whereby the simple fact that the deceased needed an urgent doctor’s appointment could be effectively communicated by the first triage nurse to the second, all information and communication being automatically electronically generated.
Responses
Report Sections
Investigation and Inquest
On 12th January 2016 an investigation into the death of Joyce Mary Ravenhill aged 84 was commenced. The investigation concluded at the end of the inquest on 23rd August 2016. The conclusion of the inquest was that the deceased who had died as a result of peritonitis, due to intestinal ischaemia, due to arteriosclerosis, had died from Natural Causes.
Circumstances of the Death
The deceased was taken ill during the afternoon of Christmas Day 2015. She had enduring abdominal pain and during the night vomited frequently and copiously. At 2.29 pm on 26th December 2015 the 111 service run by your Trust was contacted and the symptoms that the deceased was suffering were relayed to the triage nurse who took the call. The triage nurse determined that it was necessary for the deceased to be seen by the Out of Hours doctor. However, since the earliest appointment available at that time was 5.15 p.m., which was outside the mandated maximum waiting time of two hours, the triage nurse indicated that a colleague would telephone back with an earlier appointment. Subsequently a second triage nurse did call back but ignorant of the fact that the only purpose of her call was to arrange an appointment with the Out of Hours doctor, she repeated the triage process and on this occasion determined that the deceased did not need to see the Out of Hours doctor. In the event the deceased remained unwell and after a further failed attempt on 28th December to secure a doctor’s appointment through the 111 system obtained an urgent appointment with a local GP on the following day. The GP arranged for the deceased’s admission to Macclesfield Hospital where it was discovered that the deceased had an incarcerated femoral hernia which had caused an intestinal obstruction. Although a successful operation was carried out that day to repair the hernia, the deceased died on 2nd January 2016. It is probable that the incarceration of the hernia, together with the intestinal obstruction and the sequela of that condition including vomiting and resulting dehydration played a causal part in the death. It is possible that earlier recognition of the problem and earlier intervention might have prevented the deceased’s death.
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Data sourced from Courts and Tribunals Judiciary under the Open Government Licence.