The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Milly’s mum left in dark over hospital infection

‘No sound evidence’ linking claims of fatal water contaminat­ion to building failures

- LUCINDA CAMERON

The mother of a girl who died after contractin­g an infection at a flagship hospital has said she is “disappoint­ed” a review of infection control concerns has not provided answers over her daughter’s death.

Milly Main, 10, died after contractin­g an infection while recovering from leukaemia treatment at a children’s cancer ward at the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH) campus.

Her mother Kimberly Darroch, 36, said she believes her daughter’s death in August 2017 was “100%” due to contaminat­ed water but she is “still in the dark” about it.

An independen­t review, published yesterday, found no sound evidence that avoidable deaths have resulted from failures in the design, build, commission­ing or maintenanc­e of the QEUH and Royal Hospital for Children (RHC), which is part of the campus.

Ms Darroch said: “We weren’t spoken to as part of the review, but we hoped it might help us understand more about why Milly contracted an infection. “We feel we’re still in the dark.” She added: “I don’t understand how they can claim there is no evidence linking failures in the hospital design to avoidable deaths.”

The review team was asked to investigat­e if the management and execution of the project had an adverse impact on the risk of healthcare associated infection at the hospital.

An independen­t review by Health Protection Scotland (HPS) into the water supply confirmed contaminat­ion of the system in 2018.

Anas Sarwar, Labour MSP for Glasgow, who has been supporting Milly’s parents, said the review leaves “too many unanswered questions”.

He said: “This review falls short being a truly independen­t inquiry.

“It’s a first step towards understand­ing the scale of the scandal and the catastroph­ic errors which took place but there is still a lot of work to do to uncover the full truth.”

He said while ensuring future patient safety is vital, we also need to know the “full truth about what happened in the past”. of

Dr Brian Montgomery, one of the authors of the report, said: “We clearly are saddened by what happened to Milly but we were quite clear when our review was set up that we were about looking at the building and constructi­on and if there was a possible risk of infection, not about individual cases or patients.”

The authors said their review was fully independen­t.

A public inquiry is to take place to examine issues at the QEUH site and the delayed Royal Hospital for Sick Children and Young People in Edinburgh.

NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde reported Milly’s death to the procurator fiscal in February this year.

The Crown Office said the investigat­ion into the death is ongoing.

 ??  ?? Review leaders Dr Andrew Fraser, left, and Dr Brian Montgomery and, below, Milly with her mum.
Review leaders Dr Andrew Fraser, left, and Dr Brian Montgomery and, below, Milly with her mum.
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