Shorter surgery wait could have saved young woman’s life: Coroner
A young woman’s life could have been saved had she had urgent surgery more quickly, says a Coroner.
Arohaina Gilbert, 25, died within hours of being rushed to Wairoa Hospital in May last year with breathing difficulties caused by a large thyroid goitre on her neck.
The goitre squashed her windpipe, suffocating her, Coroner David Robinson found.
Her death could have been avoided if months before doctors at Hawke’s Bay District Health Board had recognised her condition was life-threatening and given her the urgent surgery she needed, he said.
“Ms Gilbert’s death could reasonably have been avoided had there been more prompt surgery review at the surgery clinic, and had surgery been undertaken,” he wrote.
Arohaina Gilbert’s mother, Monehu Gilbert, said the DHB made several mistakes and she hoped her daughter’s death had not been in vain.
“They should have treated her more quickly, instead of making her suffer,” she said. “They were too slow to put her into surgery. I don’t want another family to feel that pain . . . and it was a simple surgery too I’m told.”
Gilbert was working on fishing boats and planning a big trip overseas when she fell ill.
A CT scan in March 2018 showed she had a swelling on her thyroid.
The goitre became so big she had trouble breathing. She was referred to a thyroid surgeon on May 9, but repeated delays and unread referrals pushed this out beyond the six-week wait time for urgent cases.
But her condition deteriorated and a Wairoa GP became so concerned during a visit on May 14 she phoned the surgeon, who brought forward the operation to May 16.
But two days before the surgery, Arohaina was rushed to Wairoa Hospital struggling to breathe. She died a few hours later of asphyxia. The goitre had suffocated her.
A Hawke’s Bay DHB investigation found she should have been given an immediate referral and seen within two weeks after the CT scan in March.
The Coroner said the DHB missed key warning signs. “The Endocrine Surgical triage criteria failed to acknowledge that some non-malignant [benign] cases can be life-threatening.
“The process for obtaining a clinic appointment was cumbersome and had insufficient quality assurances and monitoring,” he said.
The DHB’s chief medical officer of health at the time, John Gommans, was part of a team that investigated Gilbert’s death. He said they missed “several opportunities” to save her life and changes had since been made.
“We only had one surgeon with the expertise at the time and we now have two, so that allows more rapid assessments,” Gommans said.
“All new referrals with Ms Gilbert’s sort of problem are now triaged and seen at the very next clinic.”
The DHB also did not have a good system for monitoring delays, he said.
“The one surgeon we had working was busy on call and no one else was monitoring the work . . . piling up . . . We now have a system in place to ensure this doesn’t happen again.”
“To have a young woman in her early 20s who died when earlier intervention could have stopped that happening . . . that is something none of us will ever forget.”
Monehu Gilbert said the family would now like a face-to-face apology from the DHB. Gommans said the DHB was happy to offer this.
Gilbert said she remembers her only daughter as hard-working, quiet and loving. “The thing I miss about her the most is that I haven’t got any mother and daughter talk no more.”
Arohaina Gilbert’s family will commemorate her at an unveiling in Waikaremoana on her birthday on December 17.