The New Zealand Herald

‘I exploded on the inside’

New mum says excruciati­ng disorder wasn’t diagnosed for 4 days

- Dubby Henry health

Two investigat­ions are under way after a deadly disorder which left a woman in excruciati­ng pain wasn’t picked up for four days.

Nicole Kildare, 42, gave birth to her son Nikau by caesarean section in Tauranga Hospital on December 22.

She started getting pain in her abdomen the next day and her stomach got bigger over the next four days.

Kildare’s medical notes, which she shared with the Herald, show a registrar queried on December 23 if she had Ogilvie syndrome.

Other registrars also saw Kildare and noted she needed interventi­on.

But while staff kept giving pain relief and some more experience­d midwives attempted to send her for a colonoscop­y, no treatment was carried out to relieve the pressure.

“My stomach was massive,” Kildare said.

“It looked like I had twins on board. If I was a cow surely they would have

If I had been left a few more hours, I would have been dead. Nicole Kildare

put a needle in to get the gas out?” On Christmas Day, Kildare’s pain got worse and her skin turned grey — a symptom of blood poisoning.

On Boxing Day, obstetric consultant Dr Aparna Basu — a doctor she hadn’t yet seen — checked on her and ordered an X-ray.

It confirmed her bowel had burst, faeces had spilled into her body, and she had blood poisoning.

Kildare had developed Ogilvie syndrome, a rare and potentiall­y fatal condition where the bowel expands like a balloon.

If the gas is not let out, the bowel can burst, drasticall­y increasing the risk of death.

She was rushed to surgery where the pressure was released, her abdomen cleaned out and her ruptured bowel fixed.

“If I had been left a few more hours, I would have been dead.”

Through her whole ordeal, Kildare was unable to feed her newborn son.

Husband Jeff, frantic with worry, was left caring for the baby and their 2-year-old daughter.

Kildare is slowly recovering but needs another operation, and says she may need up to two years off work.

She’s upset Nikau has missed out on bonding time because she can’t lift or breastfeed him. She says she has also been diagnosed with posttrauma­tic stress disorder, and she and Jeff still have nightmares.

The couple complained to the Bay of Plenty District Health Board about the time it took to diagnose her and about poor communicat­ion and overhearin­g midwives making rude

and dismissive comments about her.

“Why [did] they just keep leaving me with a conservati­ve treatment that left me gradually getting worse and worse to the point where I exploded on the inside?” Kildare told the Herald.

The Bay of Plenty DHB apologised in writing last month, admitting a “failure to recognise Nicole’s deteriorat­ion in a timely way, and to review and escalate the clinical situation to the on-call consultant”.

The DHB also admitted staff had been “unprofessi­onal” talking to the family.

The hospital’s patient quality and safety manager Debbie Brown told the Herald that the case was under review by the DHB and the Health and Disability Commission. “We acknowledg­e Miss Fensom had a particular­ly traumatic experience when she had her baby,” she said, referring to Kildare by her maiden name.

“It is very unfortunat­e for any new mother to have this type of experience at a time which should be one of excitement and joy.

“We have met with Miss Fensom and her family, and apologised for their experience.”

Brown said the DHB was working with Kildare and her family and the commission to establish and understand the course of events.

“We are committed to implementi­ng any recommenda­tions which come out of the review,” Brown said.

“We take all complaints and concerns very seriously, and where we have opportunit­ies to improve and lessons to learn, we always act on these to ensure improved care in the future.”

 ?? Picture / Alan Gibson ?? Nicole and Jeff Kildare still have nightmares about the traumatic ordeal that followed the birth of son Nikau in Tauranga Hospital.
Picture / Alan Gibson Nicole and Jeff Kildare still have nightmares about the traumatic ordeal that followed the birth of son Nikau in Tauranga Hospital.

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