The Guardian Australia

Call for inquiry after death of young girl who waited two hours in Perth emergency department

- Australian Associated Press

Western Australia’s troubled health system is facing further scrutiny following the death of a young girl forced to wait two hours for treatment at a Perth hospital’s emergency department.

Seven-year-old Aishwarya Aswath died at Perth Children’s hospital on Saturday after spending two hours waiting for treatment in the emergency department. She had been rushed to hospital with a fever.

Aishwarya’s parents told the Nine Network they had pleaded for their daughter to be seen by doctors after her eyes became cloudy and her hands became cold. She died within hours of eventually being seen by doctors.

“I went to the reception maybe four or five times and I asked them to have a look at her,” Aishwarya’s mother, Prasitha Sasidharan, told Nine. “They were actually neglecting us. We pleaded with them to have a look. They didn’t think it was an emergency.”

The state’s health minister, Roger Cook, has requested an urgent briefing from his department into the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Aishwarya’s death.

Perth’s hospitals have experience­d record levels of ambulance ramping in recent months and patients have experience­d severe delays – including at the King Edward maternity hospital.

The government has blamed increased demand for mental health treatment, staff shortages and stricter cleaning protocols linked to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Cook on Tuesday said the system was facing “challenges” and internatio­nal border closures were making it difficult to hire staff.

“I’m absolutely shocked at the moment about how these parents must be feeling … having taken their daughter to a place where she should have received the best possible care,” he told Perth radio 6PR. “My instinct is that there’s a gap in the communicat­ion process ... clearly these parents feel let down. They need answers and I want answers for them.”

The Australian Medical Associatio­n WA president, Dr Andrew Miller, has called for an independen­t inquiry into Aishwarya’s death. He said emergency department­s had been “crying out for help” for months.

“We know that bad things happen, we know that people get sick and die, even children, but what families need at this time is to know that everything possible was done, even if the worst outcome was unavoidabl­e here,” Miller said.

 ?? Photograph: Paul Kane/Getty Images ?? Seven-year-old Aishwarya Aswath died at Perth Children’s hospital on the weekend after spendingtw­o hours waiting for treatment in the emergency department.
Photograph: Paul Kane/Getty Images Seven-year-old Aishwarya Aswath died at Perth Children’s hospital on the weekend after spendingtw­o hours waiting for treatment in the emergency department.

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