Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Father died after being sent home from hospital

-

21 last year after his GP, Nicola Clayton, became concerned about his health.

In a statement she said when he visited her surgery he had struggled to walk across the waiting room and had complained of suffering from shortness of breath.

She said: “My concern was whether he had had a further drop in his haemoglobi­n levels.”

An inquest at Bradford Coroner’s Court heard that a junior doctor examined him and diagnosed him as suffering from chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease – a condition that makes it difficult to empty air out of the lungs.

Dr Rob Moisey, employed by Calderdale and NHS Foundation Trust as a consultant physician in Acute Medicine and Endocrinol­ogy, was the most senior medic to assess him during his short stay at the hospital.

He gave extensive evidence to the hearing and told assistant coroner Kirsty Gomersal his diagnosis was very similar to that of his junior colleague and said of his condition: “I was satisfied that it could be managed at home with antibiotic­s.”

But following his discharge on the evening of November 21 it was only a few hours later when he was re-admitted at 2.53am on the 22nd.

However, despite the best efforts of medics to resuscitat­e him, the popular and gregarious company director from Hepworth, near Holmfirth, was pronounced dead at 3.20am.

A post mortem was carried out by consultant pathologis­t, Dr Lisa Barker, who said the cause of death was a pulmonary embolism or clot on the lung combined with deep vein thrombosis.

She told the coroner: “It’s hard to say when the thrombosis developed. The pulmonary embolism was certainly unlikely to have been there for a long time.”

Dr Rayngapras­ad Karadi, a consultant in Acute Medicines employed by Calderdale and Huddersfie­ld NHS Foundation Trust, who specialise­s in thrombosis, was asked to give an ‘overview’ of the deceased’s treatment.

He said it was “very unlikely that a clinician would have expected pulmonary embolism.”

He was asked by Ms Gomersal: “Are you satisfied that the hospital’s procedures in connection with deep vein thrombosis were followed?” He replied: “I don’t have any concerns in that regard.”

Ms Gomersal told the deceased’s widow, Rosamund, and two of her sons, David and James, that it was clear her husband was “much-loved and adored. A sociable, funny man who was clearly good company. He had been in the Territoria­l Army and ran his own company.”

She reached the conclusion that he died from natural causes.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom