Marina Young
PFD Report
All Responded
Ref: 2024-0527
All 1 response received
· Deadline: 29 Nov 2024
Coroner's Concerns (AI summary)
In A&E, prolonged patient stays lacked timely alerts to management, care needs were inadequately assessed for complex patients, and nurses lacked essential asthma assessment knowledge without senior escalation.
View full coroner's concerns
1. When hospital management are aware that, due to hospital capacity issues or other reasons, patients will be spending more than the usual expected time in A & E, A & E managers should be alerted of this perspective status as soon as possible.
2. Any patient remaining in A & E beyond the usual expected time should have an assessment of their care needs.
3. Care needs of patients held in A & E, particularly those with complex care needs, should be identified and managed.
4. Asthma is a common condition. However, A & E lacked nurses with any knowledge of when basic assessment such as peak flow should be taken and no request for assistance from a specialist ward was made.
5. Although the nursing staff made attempts to engage the acute medical team, no attempt was made to escalate problems identified by the treating nurses to senior nursing staff
2. Any patient remaining in A & E beyond the usual expected time should have an assessment of their care needs.
3. Care needs of patients held in A & E, particularly those with complex care needs, should be identified and managed.
4. Asthma is a common condition. However, A & E lacked nurses with any knowledge of when basic assessment such as peak flow should be taken and no request for assistance from a specialist ward was made.
5. Although the nursing staff made attempts to engage the acute medical team, no attempt was made to escalate problems identified by the treating nurses to senior nursing staff
Responses
Action Planned
Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust has formulated an action plan to address the coroner's concerns and will share updates on its progress. The Trust met with the deceased's sister to offer apologies and involve her in overseeing improvements. (AI summary)
Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust has formulated an action plan to address the coroner's concerns and will share updates on its progress. The Trust met with the deceased's sister to offer apologies and involve her in overseeing improvements. (AI summary)
View full response
Dear Dr Adeley,
RE: Inquest Marina Young. Regulation 28 Report
Further to your email communication of 4th October 2024 and the associated Regulation 28 report please find attached action plan formulated in response which addresses each of the concerns that you raised.
We will be pleased to share further updates as the actions are progressed if this would assist you further.
Can I offer my apologies that you had cause to issue the Regulation 28 report. I hope that our response assures you of our commitment to learn both from Ms Young’s death, and from the subsequent inquest.
Following the inquest, Mr John Howles (Associate Director of Patient Experience and Engagement) met with Ms Young’s sister Michelle to offer further apologies and to listen to her concerns. She has kindly offered to assist with overseeing improvements identified in the action plan for which we are grateful. We will forward the action plan to her and update her on progress in line with her wishes.
Please do let me know if we can be of further assistance.
RE: Inquest Marina Young. Regulation 28 Report
Further to your email communication of 4th October 2024 and the associated Regulation 28 report please find attached action plan formulated in response which addresses each of the concerns that you raised.
We will be pleased to share further updates as the actions are progressed if this would assist you further.
Can I offer my apologies that you had cause to issue the Regulation 28 report. I hope that our response assures you of our commitment to learn both from Ms Young’s death, and from the subsequent inquest.
Following the inquest, Mr John Howles (Associate Director of Patient Experience and Engagement) met with Ms Young’s sister Michelle to offer further apologies and to listen to her concerns. She has kindly offered to assist with overseeing improvements identified in the action plan for which we are grateful. We will forward the action plan to her and update her on progress in line with her wishes.
Please do let me know if we can be of further assistance.
Sent To
- Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
Response Status
Linked responses
1 of 1
56-Day Deadline
29 Nov 2024
All responses received
About PFD responses
Organisations named in PFD reports must respond within 56 days explaining what actions they are taking.
Source: Courts and Tribunals Judiciary
Report Sections
Investigation and Inquest
On March 2023 I commenced an investigation into the death of Marina Sharon Young aged 46 the investigation concluded at the end of the inquest on Friday, 27 September 2024, the conclusion of the inquest was Marina Sharon Young died on 22 June 2022 after a 39 hour wait for a hospital bed in Royal Preston Hospital's Accident & Emergency Department. Her death, due to asthma, was preventable and was caused by neglect characterised both by a gross failure to provide appropriate assessment and medical care and an inadequate escalation of her management to specialist physicians or ITU.
The cause of death was 1a Aspiration b asthma.
The cause of death was 1a Aspiration b asthma.
Circumstances of the Death
Marina was born with spina bifida and as a result had decreased sensation from the waist down and reduced motor power in her legs which resulted in the use of an adapted car. Had undergone a bladder transplant as a child and, due to a lack of sensation, needed to self-catheterise every 3-4 hours with a disposable catheter. However, when Marina was unwell, she required assistance with catheterisation, and she was unable to complete the task by herself. Marina also wore incontinence pads.
On the morning of 20 June 2024 Marina's chest infection precipitated an asthma attack. Marina was admitted to Royal Preston Hospital Accident & Emergency Department (A & E) where she was initially appropriately assessed and treated by the A & E doctor. At this time, the hospital was full and during the remainder of Marina's 39 hour stay A & E had a 'bed block' preventing transfer of patients out of A & E was in place and would have been known to senior nursing staff. Such holding of patients in A & E was described around this time as "continuous". Marina, according to the British Thoracic Society predictive peak flow rates was throughout her stay in A & E in the "life-threatening" asthma category. Marina's asthma attack had an 80% chance of survival but, due to the acute medical team's substantial failures of medical management, inadequate treatment, insufficient direction of the nursing staff for observations and a lack of referral to either respiratory or ITU specialist teams, Marina died at approximately 10 AM on 22 June 2024. During this time Marina's nursing needs were neither assessed nor met, despite it being known to the senior nursing staff that Marina, having complex nursing needs due to her spina bifida, would be spending an extended period of time in the A & E. During Marina's 39 hour stay in A & E none of the six nurses involved with Marina undertook a nursing assessment of her toileting needs and failed to offer a catheter, assist with catheterisation or change the incontinence pad. The nursing staff made no assessment of Marina's sensory deficits due to spina bifida and relied upon patient reports for pressure area care in an overweight and incontinent patient, who remained sat in a chair due to her breathing difficulties for almost all of the 39 hours. A falls risk assessment was completed, albeit with substantial errors. When Marina died, she was still wearing the shoes that she was wearing when she arrived in the Department 39 hours earlier and which she could not remove without assistance.
It was accepted that A & E is geared up for short-term stays dealing with acutely ill patients. Any patients remaining in A & E beyond the expected period are being nursed in an area that is not designed for their needs, without the benefit of specialist nursing staff and the risks they are exposed to are consequently increased.
Despite the Matron for A & E being on the Trust's level 3 STEIS investigation, not a single concern regarding the nursing care provided was identified.
On the morning of 20 June 2024 Marina's chest infection precipitated an asthma attack. Marina was admitted to Royal Preston Hospital Accident & Emergency Department (A & E) where she was initially appropriately assessed and treated by the A & E doctor. At this time, the hospital was full and during the remainder of Marina's 39 hour stay A & E had a 'bed block' preventing transfer of patients out of A & E was in place and would have been known to senior nursing staff. Such holding of patients in A & E was described around this time as "continuous". Marina, according to the British Thoracic Society predictive peak flow rates was throughout her stay in A & E in the "life-threatening" asthma category. Marina's asthma attack had an 80% chance of survival but, due to the acute medical team's substantial failures of medical management, inadequate treatment, insufficient direction of the nursing staff for observations and a lack of referral to either respiratory or ITU specialist teams, Marina died at approximately 10 AM on 22 June 2024. During this time Marina's nursing needs were neither assessed nor met, despite it being known to the senior nursing staff that Marina, having complex nursing needs due to her spina bifida, would be spending an extended period of time in the A & E. During Marina's 39 hour stay in A & E none of the six nurses involved with Marina undertook a nursing assessment of her toileting needs and failed to offer a catheter, assist with catheterisation or change the incontinence pad. The nursing staff made no assessment of Marina's sensory deficits due to spina bifida and relied upon patient reports for pressure area care in an overweight and incontinent patient, who remained sat in a chair due to her breathing difficulties for almost all of the 39 hours. A falls risk assessment was completed, albeit with substantial errors. When Marina died, she was still wearing the shoes that she was wearing when she arrived in the Department 39 hours earlier and which she could not remove without assistance.
It was accepted that A & E is geared up for short-term stays dealing with acutely ill patients. Any patients remaining in A & E beyond the expected period are being nursed in an area that is not designed for their needs, without the benefit of specialist nursing staff and the risks they are exposed to are consequently increased.
Despite the Matron for A & E being on the Trust's level 3 STEIS investigation, not a single concern regarding the nursing care provided was identified.
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Data sourced from Courts and Tribunals Judiciary under the Open Government Licence.