Bills’ death no accident, coroner says
The death of Auckland woman Heather Bills was no accident, the chief coroner has confirmed — but her death largely remains a mystery.
Chief coroner Judge Deborah Marshall released her findings into the death on Friday following an inquest in September.
Bills, 64, died in 2013 while in the care of Middlemore Hospital in south Auckland, having survived a huge fire at her O¯ ra¯ kei home six weeks earlier.
It was later discovered she had suffered an irreversible brain injury after being given a massive dose of insulin on the evening of December 26, 2012.
It is still not known who administered the fatal dose.
She had been rescued from the explosive blaze by neighbours and admitted to hospital with serious burns.
Bills refused visitors, often expressed suicidal thoughts, and offered to pay hospital staff to end her life.
But her condition began to improve and staff expected she would recover from her injuries.
On the evening of December 26, Bills became extremely unwell while still in hospital.
A house surgeon was called to her bedside, and she was admitted to the intensive care unit.
Tests revealed her blood sugar levels were ‘‘extremely low’’, which in turn was injuring her brain.
It became clear the hypoglycaemic event was caused by an overdose of insulin.
Earlier coronial inquiries had tried to establish how Bills, who was not diabetic, had been given the dose.
Nurses who were witnesses at the inquest gave conflicting accounts of what happened that night.
Judge Marshall’s findings, released on Friday, found the fatal dose of insulin was either handed to her or administered to her.
Bills could not get out of bed to source insulin herself, and opening a vial and preparing an injection would have been beyond her abilities, Marshall found.
But she may have been able to inject insulin if it was given to her.
Judge Marshall said she was satisfied Bills was administered an overdose of insulin, and that the overdose must have been administered by someone who had access to insulin and the secure National Burn Centre. The criminal case remains open.