Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Mum misdiagnos­ed with cancer says ‘lessons have not been learned’ at trust

- By Brad Harper bharper@thekmgroup.co.uk

‘I was told I could drop dead at any moment from a heart attack or stroke. It was all needless...’

A mum-of-four who endured cancer chemothera­py after being misdiagnos­ed with the disease says a hospital trust “has not learned from its mistakes”.

Janice Johnston says she has “absolutely no faith in doctors” after being told by Kent and Canterbury Hospital staff she could “drop down dead” at any moment. The 56-year-old’s barbed remarks come after figures obtained via a Freedom of Informatio­n request reveal East Kent Hospitals University Foundation Trust (EKHUFT) has paid out £1.5 million in cancer misdiagnos­is claims and delayed diagnosis in the past five years. Astonishin­g figures also reveal the trust has settled 14 claims since 2019.

No other Kent trust has received a claim against it, the research found. Meanwhile, the NHS has paid out an eye-watering £128m in the past five years, an investigat­ion by Medical Negligence Assist shows. Ms Johnston, who was one of those misdiagnos­ed, suffered from receding gums, aching bones, nausea,

fatigue and dizziness during the gruelling treatment. Her weight plummeted to just seven stone after being told she had a rare form of the disease.

The former auxiliary nurse was forced to quit her job after being told she would have to take tablets to tackle polycythae­mia

rubra vera (PRV) for the rest of her life. Speaking to this paper, the Whitstable resident says it is “shocking” EKHUT has paid out £1.5 million in cancer misdiagnos­is claims.

“It is quite a lot of money,” she said. “I do not think it has learned from its mistakes.”

Mrs Johnston was told she had the rare cancer, which affects just two in every 100,000 people, in April 2017 after experienci­ng high blood pressure, blurred vision and dizziness.

She compares her symptoms before the diagnosis to “putting your head in a vice and tightening it”.

Medics at Kent and Canterbury decided she had PRV – a disease of the bone marrow that causes the overproduc­tion of red blood cells – without carrying out a biopsy or ultrasound scans.

The doctors’ diagnosis was guided by the results of blood tests showing she had a high number of red blood cells. Over the following year and a half, Janice says the doses of chemothera­py were increased whenever she reported that her condition had not improved.

The married mum was also treated with a venesectio­n – a procedure that removes blood from the circulator­y system – every fortnight.

“It had a big impact on my life as I had to give up my job,” she added.

“I had the chemothera­py treatment which compromise­d my immune system. “For about two years, I was told I could drop dead at any moment from a heart attack or stroke. It was all needless. “If they had done the initial tests at the very beginning, I would not have had to go through any of it.” When she told doctors she wanted to try other kinds of treatment, she was sent to speak to specialist­s at Guy’s Hospital.

During an appointmen­t there in November 2018, she says her consultant told her almost immediatel­y: “I don’t think you’ve got polycythae­mia at all.”

The doctor’s suspicions were confirmed two months later after receiving the results of a bone marrow biopsy and an ultrasound scan of her spleen.

The misdiagnos­is had a lasting impact on her, including how she views healthcare profession­als.

“I have absolutely no faith in doctors, especially Kent and

Canterbury Hospital,” she said.

“They could tell me tomorrow I have cancer but I would not believe them for a minute because of what they have done.”

Janice instructed solicitors to pursue a medical negligence claim against the East Kent Hospitals Trust.

The case was settled out of court for £75,950 after the trust admitted liability.

Tests showed that Janice has a non-cancerous condition that causes her to produce high numbers of red blood cells.

Responding to the £1.5m paid out over the past five years, EKHUFT’S chief medical officer Des Holden says he is “saddened” patients in its care had these experience­s and “would like to apologise to them and their families”. Mr Holden said: “When things go wrong, we work hard to identify what happened, what needs to be done differentl­y and any lessons that can be learned, including additional training that can be shared with colleagues to improve our services.

“Over the past five years, our cancer service has seen and started to treat more than 13,000 patients from across east Kent.”

 ?? ?? Janice Johnston’s weight dropped to just 7st during her chemothera­py and says she’s lost all faith in doctors
Janice Johnston’s weight dropped to just 7st during her chemothera­py and says she’s lost all faith in doctors

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