Irish Independent

Mum of baby with heart condition couldn’t find parking spot

- Louise Roseingrav­e

THE mother of a baby with a congenital heart condition had to park in a housing estate and run to hospital to attend a vital appointmen­t, an inquest heard.

Anne-Marie Lafferty travelled 230km from Lifford, Co Donegal, but couldn’t find parking at Our Lady’s Children’s Hospital Crumlin.

She ran with her baby to the hospital in a bid to attend an appointmen­t with a heart specialist for her son, Cormac, on September 6, 2016. He died in hospital four days later.

The infant and his twin brother Callum were born on June 16, 2016, at the National Maternity Hospital.

Cormac had been diagnosed with a congenital heart condition before he was born.

His condition was diagnosed with Tetralogy of Fallot, a combinatio­n of four related anomalies that commonly occur together.

He underwent open heart surgery one month prior to his unexpected admission to hospital on September 6, 2016. The infant was admitted the day of the appointmen­t due to concerns over oxygen saturation levels.

He died in hospital four days later, Dublin Coroner’s Court heard. His mother said he was smiling and happy the night before he died.

“Cormac was laughing and smiling at me that night. He was a very alert baby. I fed him and went to bed. Before I left I saw he was sleeping peacefully,” Ms Lafferty told the inquest.

A nurse woke the infant to feed him at 4am on September 10. However, the baby didn’t finish the feed and became unsettled and began “crying inconsolab­ly”, the nurse said.

Cormac was found to be distressed by his own breathing efforts and morphine was administer­ed to help him relax.

However, the infant’s condition deteriorat­ed again suddenly at 6.20am when his oxygen saturation levels dropped to 20pc.

An emergency arrest call was made. Efforts to save Baby Cormac’s life failed and he died shortly before noon.

Coroner Dr Myra Cullinane adjourned the inquest to hear further medical evidence from a number of medical witnesses on a date to be decided.

‘Cormac was smiling at me that night. He was a very alert baby’

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