Otago Daily Times

‘Truth has definitely come out’

- ROB KIDD rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

THE death of a Dunedin toddler who was repeatedly discharged from hospital has implicatio­ns for emergency department­s nationwide, a coroner says.

More than a year since the inquest into the death of Hineihana Sosefina Mausii, coroner Brigitte Windley yesterday released her findings, which clarified the numerous failings that led to the girl’s death a couple of months shy of her 3rd birthday on September 29, 2013.

Hineihana’s mother, Tracey Elvins, was happy with the thorough review, which marked the end of a nearly sevenyear battle for justice.

‘‘The truth has definitely come out,’’ she said.

‘‘But it’s hard to feel like you’ve won something because the reason this is happening is the greatest loss I’m ever going to feel.’’

She first took Hineihana to Dunedin Hospital early on September 27, 2013, with a cough and fever.

Staff gave her paracetamo­l, ibuprofen and an ice block and diagnosed a respirator­y infection.

But the next day, Hineihana’s health had plummeted.

Her second trip to the hospital resulted in what Ms Windley called the ‘‘critical failure’’.

By this stage Hineihana was irritable, wheezing and not eating, but a junior doctor decided she was fit to send home.

He conferred with a consultant who, rather than assess the patient himself, looked across the ward and decided she appeared ‘‘well and happy’’.

The following day, Hineihana stopped breathing and was rushed back to hospital, where she could not be resuscitat­ed.

A postmortem found she had acute myeloid leukaemia.

A Southern District Health Board (SDHB) serious and adverse event review uncovered a range of shortcomin­gs: ‘‘lack of [a] multidisci­plinary approach, inexperien­ce, inadequate supervisio­n of [an] inexperien­ced house surgeon [and] inadequate safetynet procedure’’.

Ms Elvins made a complaint to the health and disability commission­er, which found the consultant, SDHB and a Healthline nurse who was consulted the morning of Hineihana’s death were in breach of the code of conduct.

Ms Windley said measures had since been put in place to stop any repeat.

‘‘The SDHB has since instituted a blanket requiremen­t that all paediatric representa­tions to the emergency department must be reviewed by a senior doctor,’’ she said.

‘‘To give genuine effect to the preventati­ve potential of that requiremen­t, such a ‘review’ must be more than a prescribed tickbox exercise.’’

Further, she said: ‘‘I consider that every DHB in New Zealand should reflect on the adequacy of their own ED practices for senior doctor review of paediatric patients.’’

The coroner urged medical training facilities in Australasi­a to use any educationa­l resource that was developed as a result of Hineihana’s case.

Ms Elvins was glad her daughter would have a legacy and that lives might be saved but struggled to come to terms with her loss.

‘‘I miss her so much, all the time, every day,’’ she said.

‘‘At least Hineihana can rest easy now.’’

 ?? PHOTO PETER MCINTOSH ?? ‘‘Greatest loss’’ . . . Tracey Elvins holds images of her daughter Hineihana, who died in 2013 after substandar­d hospital care.
PHOTO PETER MCINTOSH ‘‘Greatest loss’’ . . . Tracey Elvins holds images of her daughter Hineihana, who died in 2013 after substandar­d hospital care.

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