Glasgow Times

Hospital blasted overOAPtra­gedy

- By LOUISE HOUSTON

HOSPITAL bosses have been told to apologise for “serious failings” in the care of a 68-yearold woman, who died after being given a drug she was allergic to.

The Scottish Public Services Ombudsman said the patient, identified as Mrs A, had been “wrongly administer­ed” the drug Amoxicilli­n when she was known to be allergic to penicillin.

While her death was not due to this, Ombudsman Jim Martin said there had been “unreasonab­le delay” in assessing and treating her condition as it worsened.

He stated: “It will be very distressin­g for Mrs A’s family to learn that the failings identified may have altered the outcome for Mrs A.”

His report said there had been “serious failings in care” and recommende­d NHS Lanarkshir­e apologise to the patient’s family.

The woman, who suffered from asthma, ischaemic heart disease and lung condition chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease (COPD), was admitted to Monklands Hospital in Airdrie early in the morning of December 26 2014.

She died in the hospital just over a week later on January 2, 2015.

Her husband, identified as Mr C, told ambulance staff who took her to hospital and medics working in the emergency department that she was allergic to penicillin, saying that on two previous occa- sions the drug had caused her to go into anaphylact­ic shock.

When the woman’s daughter, herself a nurse, visited the hospital on the evening of December 26, she saw in medical records her mother had been given Amoxicilli­n, a penicillin antibiotic.

The staff nurse who gave her the drug said she was “unsure” if Mrs A was wearing a red wristband, which would have identified her as suffering from allergies, at the time.

The Ombudsman’s report said while there was “human error”, the failure by staff to follow drug administra­tion policies “was a serious incident and represente­d serious failings in care”.

The Ombudsman also highlighte­d a “failure by both nursing and medical staff to take appropriat­e action after Mrs A was wrongly administer­ed Amoxicilli­n”.

His report stated: “It is of significan­t concern that there was an unreasonab­le delay in assessing and treating the deteriorat­ion in Mrs A’s condition.

“There were missed opportunit­ies to consider a diagnosis of acute severe asthma in Mrs A, to adhere to national guidelines and to identify the severity of the deteriorat­ion in Mrs A’s condition earlier on in her admission.”

Irene Barkby, director of nursing at NHS Lanarkshir­e, said: “We fully accept the Ombudsman’s recommenda­tions and we will once again be writing to apologise to the family for the failings identified in this case and for the distress caused.

“Since January 2015 a great deal of work has taken place to avoid similar incidents including introducin­g more robust measures to enhance medicine management.”

 ??  ?? The woman was admitted to Monklands Hospital in Airdrie early in the morning of December 26 in 2014
The woman was admitted to Monklands Hospital in Airdrie early in the morning of December 26 in 2014

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