Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

‘HE ONLY WENT IN WITH A BROKEN LEG’

Great-grandfathe­r, 91, died with Covid-19 on hospital ward

- By Gerry Warren gwarren@thekmgroup. co.uk

WIDOW SLAMS HOSPITAL AFTER HUSBAND’S COVID-19 DEATH ON WARD

A grieving widow has slammed a hospitals trust at the centre of a Covid-19 deaths crisis as she fears her husband died after catching the virus on a ward.

Dick Lukehurst, from Stodmarsh, had undergone surgery on a broken leg at Ashford’s William Harvey Hospital after strictly shielding at home for three months. The retired BT engineer tested negative for coronaviru­s on admission to hospital but positive four days later. His condition deteriorat­ed and on July 20 his wife, Thelma, says he died a “lonely, miserable death”. Mrs Lukehurst, who had only been allowed to see her husband of 43 years twice in two months, said: “Surely a hospital should be a place to make you well, not give you a deadly illness.”

In recent weeks, more people have been dying with Covid-19 at sites run by the East Kent Hospitals Trust - including the William Harvey - than anywhere else in England. Last week the seven deaths in its hospitals accounted for almost a sixth of those recorded nationally. Mr Lukehurst underwent surgery at the William Harvey after suffering a fractured femur in a fall in the garden. Before the 91-year-old’s admission on May 28, the couple had been carefully isolating themselves at home - not seeing family and having their shopping dropped in a front porch.

“He came through the operation at the William Harvey really well and was in good spirits, and even said, ‘at least I haven’t got Covid’,” Mrs Lukehurst, 88, said. “He was mentally alert with a good sense of humour, but then he tested positive for the virus and gradually found it more difficult to talk as it took hold.

“I was allowed to visit him on July 3 and he was so pleased and asked when I would be coming again. “We talked on the phone and by July 12 he was Covid-free, but the infection had done a lot of damage.

“Being in that bed alone and unable to move must have been hell for him.” Tearfully recalling one of their last conversati­ons, Mrs Lukehurst added: “He told me not to reproach myself and that we had had 43 wonderful years together. After that he was just too weak to hold the phone.

“Being so cut off from his family and alone broke his spirit completely.

“I was the only one allowed to visit. His son, Paul, didn’t see him in all the time he was in hospital, which was very sad for them both.

“The last time I was allowed in was on July 19. He couldn’t talk but I could see in his eyes that he could hear me. “But the doctors told me they couldn’t do anything more for him.

“I went to the ward the following day and they just came up to me and said, ‘I’m sorry love, he’s passed’”. An inquest into Mr Lukehurst’s death opened yesterday (Wednesday), where it was revealed he had died of acute bronchopne­umonia, with Covid-19 a contributo­ry factor. In-hospital transmissi­on is thought to have been a major factor in the spike in deaths across East Kent, and last week the trust’s 9,000 staff were tested in a five-day blitz, with 15 positive cases confirmed. Infection control specialist­s have also been sent to the trust’s hospitals to help staff. Mrs Lukehurst believes her husband’s death was avoidable. “Now it’s clear the hospital was not operating satisfacto­ry practices when Dick was admitted,” she said.

“I saw people just walking onto the ward without wearing face masks and no one’s temperatur­e being taken, although that did later change.

“I just want them to acknowledg­e there were failings and apologise and recognise that Dick should not have caught Covid on the ward.” Mrs Lukehurst and her stepson are now preparing to make a formal complaint through the Patient Advice and Liaison Service, known as PALS

She added: “Yes, Dick was a little frail, but after his operation I was hoping he would come home again and we would have some precious time together.

“I am just so sad that his last few weeks were so lonely. It was a miserable way for his life to end.”

‘I am just so sad that his last few weeks were so lonely. It was a miserable way for his life to end’

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 ??  ?? Thelma Lukehurst (right) holding a picture of her beloved husband, Dick, who was a former glider and light aircraft pilot
Thelma Lukehurst (right) holding a picture of her beloved husband, Dick, who was a former glider and light aircraft pilot

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