Irish Independent

‘We left the hospital with empty arms, looking for graveyard’ – parents tell of baby’s death at inquest

- Louise Roseingrav­e

THE parents of a baby stillborn at the Rotunda Hospital say part of them died the day their baby son died.

Cintia Reina and Alan Chagas, originally from Brazil but living in Phibsboro, Dublin 7, say they want to make sure another baby doesn’t die in similar circumstan­ces.

Baby Arthur Reina Chagas was born unresponsi­ve at 8.59pm on March 28, 2018.

A verdict of medical misadventu­re was returned at an inquest into the baby’s death at Dublin Coroner’s Court.

The baby’s mother said she repeatedly asked for the baby to be delivered by caesarean section because her baby was in distress.

“We went to the Rotunda to have our baby Arthur but we left the hospital with empty arms and looking for a graveyard.

“I asked for my baby to be delivered by C-section many times but nobody listened to me and my baby died in my belly. The CTG traces were not read properly when our baby was in distress.

“Things must change, babies cannot keep dying. Something needs to be done. We have lost our son and we want to make sure that this doesn’t happen

again. Part of us is dead since our son died and we feel we die a little more every day,” Ms Reina said, speaking after the inquest.

A resumed inquest into baby Arthur’s death heard the consultant on call was not contacted and the senior registrar was too busy to review the baby’s condition in the lead-up to his birth.

Senior registrar Dr Mohamed Elshaikh told the inquest he was “too busy with other patients”.

Asked why he did not contact the consultant on call, he replied: “I didn’t call him.”

The inquest previously heard that obstetric staff were busy with an instrument­al delivery during this time.

Two separate midwives said they did not inform the consultant on call.

Both said they were waiting for doctors present on the ward to become available to assess Ms Reina.

The baby’s heart rate dropped to a dangerous level by 8.43pm. Baby Arthur was stillborn following an emergency caesarean section performed at 8.59pm.

A post-mortem examinatio­n found the baby died due to an acute hypoxic event between four and six hours before delivery.

The cause of this event is not known.

The inquest heard of complicati­ons relating to electronic note-taking systems at the hospital.

Master of the Rotunda Professor Fergal Malone admitted there were inefficien­cies in the electronic system but said overall its introducti­on had brought a “significan­t increase in efficiency”.

Returning a verdict of medical misadventu­re, Coroner Dr Myra Cullinane endorsed the changes at the hospital and recommende­d the reinforcem­ent of reliance on full clinical informatio­n rather than sole reliance on the CTG trace to monitor foetal well-being.

 ??  ?? Alan Chagas and Cintia Reina
Alan Chagas and Cintia Reina

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