Portsmouth News

‘Think again’ plea to coroner over hospital deaths inquests delay

Lawyers say long wait ‘unacceptab­le’ as police probe set to last for years

- By BEN FISHWICK Chief reporter ben.fishwick@thenews.co.uk

LAWYERS representi­ng families of four people who died at Gosport War Memorial Hospital have written to the coroner to question the delay over the inquests into their deaths until after a major police probe.

Kent and Essex Serious Crime Directorat­e launched the investigat­ion into the Hampshire unit after an inquiry found that hundreds of patients had their lives shortened through the use of opioids in the late 1990s.

A short hearing was held at Portsmouth Coroner’s Court last month to open inquests into the deaths of Dulcie Middleton, Horace

Smith, Eva Page and Clifford Houghton, following requests from their families.

Coroner Christophe­r Wilkinson adjourned the hearings until the conclusion of the police investigat­ion.

As reported, Hampshire police and crime commission­er Donna Jones has said that could last up to four years.

A recent forum meeting was told police investigat­ors had three million separate items to be scanned, stored and reviewed as part of ‘the most complex and significan­t investigat­ion of its nature in the country’.

Emma Jones, partner at Leigh Day, who represents the families, said: ‘The families we represent have been waiting many years for a full account of the circumstan­ces surroundin­g their deaths at Gosport War Memorial Hospital.

‘To make them wait for another indetermin­ate length of time, when many of the families are themselves elderly, is not acceptable, and in any event is quite clearly unnecessar­y. We are asking the coroner to think again.’

Ms Jones said that inquests had previously been run in parallel with police investigat­ions, including into deaths in the Hillsborou­gh tragedy.

The new inquests will look at the death of 71-year-old Mr Houghton after he was admitted to the hospital in February 1994 for a period of respite.

He died on the day he was given two doses of diamorphin­e because of ‘deteriorat­ion’, and the 2018 review panel concluded that he was given opioids without appropriat­e clinical indication.

His stepdaught­er Pamela Byrne believes there is reason to suspect her stepfather died a ‘violent or unnatural death’.

Mrs Middleton died aged 86 in September 2001, three months after she was admitted to the hospital for rehabilita­tion following a stroke.

Her nephew David Wilson and daughter Marjorie Bulbeck say Mrs Middleton’s treatment at the hospital was ‘neglectful and inhumane, she was not assisted with food and became dehydrated and was denied basic nursing care’.

Ms Page, 88, died in March 1998 and the Gosport Independen­t Panel report concluded her death was a case of opioid usage without appropriat­e clinical indication.

Mr Smith, 73, died in April 1999 after his condition had been said to be improving, although he was subsequent­ly prescribed diamorphin­e.

To make families wait for an indetermin­ate length of time is not acceptable. Emma Jones

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 ?? ?? REPRESENTA­TION Leigh Day partner Emma Jones
REPRESENTA­TION Leigh Day partner Emma Jones

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