Daily Mail

Mother killed by sepsis after doctors ‘fail to intervene’ in miscarriag­e

- Daily Mail Reporter

A MOtheR of two died from sepsis shortly after going into labour when she was just three months pregnant, an inquest was told yesterday.

Doctors failed to perform a medical terminatio­n on Reeta Saidha, 38, when it became clear she was miscarryin­g, a coroner heard.

Lawyers for Mrs Saidha’s grieving family argue that not removing the foetus led to her contractin­g the deadly disease and constitute­d a failing of care.

She was just 15 weeks pregnant when her waters broke on December 19 last year, Chelmsford Coroner’s Court heard.

After being admitted into the gynaecolog­y ward in Basildon hospital, essex, she was told to wait between 24 and 48 hours for a natural miscarriag­e before the doctors would consider surgery.

Mrs Saidha began to develop sepsis while her condition deteriorat­ed and she was rushed into surgery to remove the foetus on December 22. She was put on life support in the intensive care unit but died a day later.

A senior doctor, Shaheen Mannan, who monitored Mrs Saidha’s condition from December 21, said surgery at an earlier stage was too risky because she had previously had caesarean sections.

Dr Mannan said: ‘I told her that there was natural management and surgical management and discussed the risk of continuing without surgical terminatio­n.

‘She said she did not want a child with a poor outcome and she agreed to natural terminatio­n straight away. Surgical management at that time is extremely risky because she was only 15 weeks pregnant and we are not trained to do surgery at that time because the surgery is so advanced.

‘She was not in pain and nothing had changed since she was admitted and when I spoke to her she had no complaints.’ Mrs Saidha’s husband, Booshan, 41, said: ‘When she was first admitted she was not experienci­ng any pain. I was still of the mindset that this is all to do with the labour pains. Sepsis was not mentioned to me once at this stage.

‘We thought that we were in the doctors’ hands and that this was all the way forward.

‘She kept saying to me, “I love you and I love the family”. It was not normal but I now know that one of the symptoms of sepsis is that you feel like you are going to die.

‘My whole world has been flipped upside down now because of things that should have been done.’

the fact Mrs Saidha’s case was not flagged as ‘urgent’ during a shift change also contribute­d to her death, her family allege.

Dr Neerja Gupta was the on-call consultant in the gynaecolog­y ward. She told the inquest that on this ‘particular­ly complex and busy day’, she had not known of Mrs Saidha’s deteriorat­ion until three hours after the initial sepsis diagnosis.

‘I was not aware that she was diagnosed with sepsis until 4pm and I think it would be appropriat­e to have been told about Reeta’s condition at about 1.15pm,’ she said.

however, Dr Gupta did not go and personally examine Mrs Saidha after being made aware of her worsening state because of a more desperate case on the floor.

Dr Amita Sahare started her overnight shift as the on- call registrar in obstetrics and gynaecolog­y at 8pm on December 21. her handover did not show the urgency of dealing with Mrs Saidha and she did not see her until 11.15pm, she told the inquest.

Senior essex coroner Caroline BeasleyMur­ray asked her if the handover had been thorough enough.

‘It did not inform me about the urgency of seeing Mrs Saidha,’ Dr Sahare said.

the inquest into the death of Mrs Saidha, from Grays, essex, continues.

 ??  ?? Pregnant: Reeta Saidha with her daughters
Pregnant: Reeta Saidha with her daughters

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