Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Payout for epilepsy woman

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The hospital trust admitted wrongly ending a course of treatment and failing to increase the dose of another anti-seizure medication.

It also admitted that evening doses of required medication were not given on two occasions and monitoring of Katrina’s medication when transferri­ng her between wards was inadequate.

Katrina’s mother, who has already lost daughter Krisia to epilepsy, said: “What happened to Katrina shouldn’t happen to anyone.

“I asked the nurses who were caring for her what specific epilepsy training they’d had and they told me it was very little.

“That is very concerning. From what I saw there were no protocols or procedures being followed to care for patients with epilepsy.

“Katrina had lots of fits while in hospital and they should have been logging every one, how long it was for, what type of fit it was, her reactions and her recovery. But they didn’t even sit with her through the fits.

“I counted 24 fits one day and logged them myself. Katrina didn’t even have time to go to sleep because the fits were so regular.

“I remember trying to get her into bed one day and she fell onto it. She turned around to me and said ‘What’s the point?’ It broke me. She had given up.”

She added: “Katrina was an independen­t young lady and she used to swim with me. Now, she is more reliant on me and calls me ‘mummy,’ which she hasn’t done since she was a child.

“She was in bed for so long she now has a damaged foot, she stutters when she talks and is 10% more disabled than before.

“She had to go for physio to walk again, she needed salts to help her swallow and she had to learn how to go to the toilet again.”

Tamsin White, from Hudgell Solicitors, said: “Katrina was 31 at time of her treatment in hospital and at that time she was able-bodied and living independen­tly with support, and she could communicat­e well.

“Her life has changed considerab­ly as a result of the hospital’s failure to provide her with the treatment she required.”

Chief nurse at the trust, Brendan Brown, said: “We are genuinely sorry that Katrina’s care was not to the standard which she and her family deserved and which we would wish to deliver to our patients.

“We carried out a full internal investigat­ion at the time and, where shortcomin­gs were identified, shared findings and learning with our teams to improve the care we offer to other patients. With the settlement now agreed I would again take the opportunit­y to offer an unreserved apology to Katrina and her family.”

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