Yorkshire Post

‘Police had to break door to get to tragic mother’

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PARAMEDICS CALLED by a woman pregnant with twins had to get the police to break down her door after she collapsed on the bathroom floor, their inquest was told.

Chantelle Page, 28, and her daughters did not survive the coronary thrombosis she suffered, said to be a rare complicati­on of pregnancy.

Twins Violet Rose and Lilly Mae were delivered by Caesarian section at the Friarage Hospital in Northaller­ton in North Yorkshire immediatel­y upon their mother’s arrival there on September 6.

Coroner Michael Oakley, sitting at County Hall in Northaller­ton, heard that Lilly Mae was stillborn and Violet Rose died around 30 minutes later, after only faint signs of life had been found.

The twins were delivered at around 27 weeks gestation, the inquest heard.

Ms Page, who was asthmatic and a smoker, rang twice for an ambulance after complainin­g of chest pains and difficulty breathing. A first ambulance had been diverted away to a higher priority call for a patient who could not breathe, the hearing was told.

Clare Appleton, an emergency care assistant for the Yorkshire Ambulance Service, said a crew was sent to Ms Page’s flat in Topcliffe, near Thirsk, and when there was no response, police were called to break down the door.

Ms Page had been alone in the flat and was found lying face down on the bathroom floor.

The customer care assistant was driven to the Friarage Hospital where an emergency care team was waiting. Mr Oakley recorded that the deaths of Ms Page and Violet Rose were from natural causes and Lilly Mae was stillborn.

He said: “I don’t think there are any big lessons to be learned from this at all, it was one of those very tragic occurrence­s and my sympathies go to her family.”

The twins’ father, Mark Bramhald, said he had struggled to understand the tragedy and has needed hospital treatment.

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