The Daily Telegraph

Carer had leg amputated after doctors took too long to treat her

Molly Harbron, 25, felt her life was not worth living after ‘petrifying’ incident during the first lockdown

- By Alex Barton

A 25-YEAR-OLD carer had her leg amputated after doctors failed to treat her quickly enough during lockdown.

Molly Harbron, from Batley, West Yorkshire, lost her left leg in April 2020, after medical staff were too slow to act when she was taken to hospital, complainin­g of a tingling sensation.

The “nightmare” left Mrs Harbron feeling that “life wasn’t worth living” after she awoke from surgery to a missing limb.

Mrs Harbron said: “It was petrifying. I woke up and was shown that I had no leg. It was absolutely awful. I broke down in tears and was crying over the phone to my mum.

“But I was all alone in the hospital because of lockdown restrictio­ns; it felt like a nightmare.”

She added: “I remember joking with the surgeon before the operation and saying ‘don’t chop my leg off because you’ll make me an inch shorter’.

“He responded: ‘I’ll make you two inches shorter, if you aren’t careful’.”

The Mid Yorkshire Teaching NHS Trust admitted liability for the incident and apologised for its mistakes.

“All I have is a letter saying sorry and that’s not good enough. I used to run a few miles a week and now I’m mostly in a wheelchair,” she said.

Mrs Harbron, who has Type 1 diabetes, went to Dewsbury and District Hospital A&E on April 25 2020, in the first Covid-19 lockdown, after experienci­ng numbness in her foot and calf pain.

Doctors suspected she was suffering from deep vein thrombosis and booked her in for surgery at 9pm that day.

But the procedure did not take place until 1pm the next day after she was transferre­d to Pinderfiel­ds Hospital in Wakefield for a scan and then to Leeds General Infirmary for emergency surgery.

Mrs Harbron said she had been experienci­ng diabetic ketoacidos­is, a condition where the blood sugar spikes, which leads to blood clots. She believes the condition was the reason she lost her leg and that earlier treatment would have prevented the issue.

Surgeons were unable to save Mrs Harbron’s leg during the delayed procedure and had to carry out a belowknee amputation.

She then suffered from sepsis and medics had to perform an aboveknee amputation.

The Mid Yorkshire Hospital Trust, which runs the Dewsbury facility, has admitted failings in the care of Mrs Harbron. She said: “I’m angry, especially because I know it could have been prevented. It’s a kick in the teeth.

“It is heart-breaking again, just knowing that I could lead a normal life, but because of them I can’t.”

Mrs Harbron, who now uses a wheelchair and a prosthetic, said her former partner left her “because he didn’t want to go out with a disabled girl”.

She worried that no one would want to date her, but a month later she met her now husband who she married in 2023.

Her lawyers are negotiatin­g a settlement to cover the impact on her life, the cost of rehabilita­tion and future care.

The former carer said she wants to raise awareness of her issue and prevent a similar incident happening to anyone else.

She said: “I don’t want it to happen to someone else. They might not have the support that I had.

“The hospital needs to take accountabi­lity with what they have done, playing God with people’s lives.”

Richard Robinson, chief medical officer at the Mid Yorkshire Hospital Trust, said: “We aim to ensure all patients get the right diagnosis and the treatment they need to get better. In Mrs Harbron’s case that did not happen and for that I am sincerely sorry.”

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 ?? ?? Molly Harbron, 25, said ‘it felt like a nightmare’ when she lost her leg after doctors too long to assess her
Molly Harbron, 25, said ‘it felt like a nightmare’ when she lost her leg after doctors too long to assess her

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