The Post

Death suspects still atDHB

- HARRISON CHRISTIAN

Three nurses who are suspects in a police homicide inquiry are still employed by Counties Manukau District Health Board.

A coroner’s inquest into the death of Auckland’s Heather Bills wrapped up in Auckland District Court yesterday.

Bills died in 2013 while in the care of Middlemore Hospital, having survived an explosive fire at her ra¯kei home six weeks earlier.

Neighbours rescued the 64-year-old from the blaze and she was admitted to hospital with serious burns.

Six weeks later, however, she was dead, after suffering an irreversib­le brain injury caused by a large dose of insulin.

The person who administer­ed the insulin dose to Bills remains a mystery. During the inquest, police revealed they have three suspects in their own investigat­ion, all of whom are nurses that worked on Bills’ care.

Nurses who were witnesses at the inquest gave conflictin­g accounts of what happened the night she suffered the fatal brain injury. The inquest was also told Bills had offered to pay hospital staff to end her life.

Yesterday, a spokeswoma­n for Counties Manukau DHB confirmed it still employs all three nurses.

‘‘In 2013, when Ms Bills died, the police conducted a full investigat­ion including interviewi­ng the staff who had contact with Ms Bills,’’ the spokeswoma­n said.

‘‘The police investigat­ion did not result in a prosecutio­n of any individual. The DHB was also never advised that the police had any particular concerns about the acts or omissions of any particular individual.’’

Through the coronial process, the DHB had learnt for the first time that police had three suspects, and it had no proof of wrongdoing by any of those staff, the spokeswoma­n said.

‘‘The DHB has obligation­s to be a good employer in accordance

"In the absence of any proof of wrongdoing, the DHB could not take action against an employee."

A spokeswoma­n for Counties Manukau DHB

with the State Services Act and must follow all the requiremen­ts of the laws protecting employees in New Zealand.

‘‘In the absence of any proof of wrongdoing, the DHB could not take action against an employee.’’

The spokeswoma­n added: ‘‘The DHB is co-operating with the coroner’s process, as it did with the police investigat­ion.

‘‘If further informatio­n comes to light through the inquest process, or any other route, the DHB will consider that informatio­n and if appropriat­e will act on it.’’

On Wednesday, the DHB apologised over Bills’ death, and revealed it wasn’t until a number of days later that the possibilit­y of homicide was raised.

The acting chief executive of the DHB, Gloria Johnson, who was chief medical officer of the DHB when Bills died, gave evidence at the inquest.

‘‘I do want to take the opportunit­y to say how incredibly sorry I am, and I want to apologise on behalf of the DHB,’’ Johnson said to Bills’ daughter, Michelle Maher.

Johnson added she still did not know how Bills came to be given the fatal dose.

The coroner reserved her findings yesterday.

 ??  ?? Heather Bills
Heather Bills

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