Stockport Express

Man caught fatal Covid dose while he was in hospital

- THOMAS MOLLOY stockporte­xpress@menmedia.co.uk @stockportn­ews

A‘DEVOTED’ family man caught Covid19 in hospital and died, weeks after being admitted with severe back pain.

A consultant from Stepping Hill Hospital in Stockport told an inquest that the virus “most likely” came from a staff member who did not know they had it.

South Manchester Coroner’s Court heard that Malcolm

Garrett, of Marple Bridge, had received a lung transplant eight years earlier and as a result was immunosupp­ressed.

Following the 61-yearold’s death, a senior coroner has vowed to write a prevention of future deaths report to the Health Secretary, to try and “avoid and minimise the risk of immunosupp­ressed transplant patients in acute settings”.

Mr Garrett’s daughter Laura told the inquest that since his transplant, he had not been as active or mobile as before but that he had “gained a new perspectiv­e of what was manageable with his level of ability”.

On July 31 2021, Mr Garrett started to complain of a bad back and when things got worse on Monday (August 2) his wife Yvonne rang his GP. After being told that there would be a two or three hour wait for a telephone consultati­on, Mr Garrett asked his wife to ring him an ambulance.

“If Malcolm could keep out of hospital, he wouldn’t go in so for him to volunteer... it was the first time I’d known it,” she told the court. “He left the house at half past five on Monday evening and never came home again.”

Upon being admitted at Stepping Hill Hospital, it was discovered that Mr Garrett had a wedge fracture of his T9 vertebra in his spine. The inquest heard that this was likely to have been caused by osteoporos­is - a side effect of the steroids that Mr Garrett took following his lung transplant.

Dr Alexander Tempowski, a respirator­y consultant at Stepping Hill Hospital, told the hearing that the fracture caused “a number of difficulti­es”. Mr Garrett was fitted with a brace to help manage the pain from the fracture but the fitting of the brace led to respirator­y problems and it was eventually removed.

Instead, Mr Garrett was given codeine and morphine as Dr Tempowski told the court that not being able to breathe “in a normal fashion” would have led to a risk of Mr Garrett contractin­g pneumonia while in hospital.

Dr Tempowski said that between August 3 and 7, “one of Mr Garrett’s kidneys stopped working”. This led to opiate toxicity because his kidney was unable to excrete the painkiller­s that had been given to him. Mr Garrett had to be given Naloxone to treat the toxicity.

He then developed pneumonia and was given antibiotic­s through a drip but deteriorat­ed and was given oxygen through noninvasiv­e ventilatio­n (NIV). Towards the end of August, Mr Garrett was “stabilisin­g”, Dr Tempowski said, and efforts were being made to “wean him off” the NIV.

At the start of September, he caught an infection and started to deteriorat­e again.

Dr Tempowski said that he showed signs of improvemen­t on the week beginning September 14 but was deteriorat­ing again by September 17.

On September 19, he tested positive for Covid-19, which Dr Tempowski admitted would have been caught in hospital and that it was “most likely from a staff member who didn’t know they had Covid.”

Mr Garrett was moved to a Covid treatment ward but died on September 23.

Following a post mortem, pathologis­t Prof Christophe­r Hunt found Mr Garrett died from a combinatio­n of Covid pneumoniti­s and pseudomona­s aeruginosa bronchopne­umonia.

He said that chronic immunosupp­ression, chronic allograft dysfunctio­n, the wedge fracture, ischemic heart disease and chronic kidney disease were all contributo­ry factors.

Recording a narrative conclusion, senior coroner Alison Mutch said: “He died from Covid-19 while an inpatient that was contribute­d to by the complicati­ons of a lung transplant.”

Ms Mutch also said that she would write a prevention of future deaths report to the Health Secretary Sajid Javid. “Clearly management and risk of immunosupp­ressed transplant patients in an acute setting is something that has to be considered as a long-term issue within the NHS,” she added.

“The person best placed consider how that should be managed to avoid and minimise the risk that is presented to these patients is clearly the Secretary of State for Health.”

Speaking to the Express following the hearing, Mr Garrett’s family said: “He was devoted to his family and we’ve just lost such a big part of our life.”

 ?? ?? ●●Malcolm Garrett
●●Malcolm Garrett

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