Scottish Daily Mail

Doctors support trainee in sepsis tragedy

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

THOUSANDS of doctors have signed a letter protesting against the decision to strike off a doctor whose mistakes led a sixyear-old boy to die from sepsis.

Jack Adcock, who had Down’s syndrome and a heart condition, died after trainee paediatric­ian Hadiza Bawa-Garba marked him ‘do not resuscitat­e’ because she had confused him with another patient.

In 2015 she was convicted of manslaught­er through gross negligence but was suspended from practising for just 12 months, which the General Medical Council appealed against.

In the run-up to the appeal, around 800 doctors signed a letter supporting her. It was claimed she was being shielded by her peers after doctors last year said the pursuit of Bawa-Garba was ‘perpetuati­ng an injustice’ against her.

But last week the initial decision by the Medical Practition­ers Tribunal Service not to strike Bawa-Garba off, but to give her a year’s suspension instead, was overturned.

Now 7,500 doctors have signed a further petition, within 24 hours following the overturned decision, claiming it could put doctors off admitting mistakes in future.

Bawa-Garba made a catalogue of errors leading up to Jack’s death at Leicester Royal

‘Deep-seated concerns’

Infirmary in 2011. She had wrongly diagnosed him with gastroente­ritis, when he had sepsis. She took three hours to examine X-rays revealing he had a chest infection, and then ignored blood tests showing signs of kidney problems.

Bawa-Garba also failed to make it clear in his notes he should not be given a drug which lowers blood pressure and is unsuitable for people in septic shock. When he suffered a septic shock, leading to a ‘crash call’ for doctors to revive him, Jack was mixed up with a discharged patient who had a ‘do not resuscitat­e’ instructio­n on his notes – and the resuscitat­ion was called off.

Jack’s mother, Nicola Adcock, said last month she was ‘disgusted that doctors are all sticking together’. The six-year-old’s family believe Bawa-Garba has never shown any remorse for the death. But the new letter signed by doctors across the UK defends the 40-year-old paediatric­ian and expresses ‘deep-seated concerns’ about the consequenc­es of her conviction and striking off.

It states: ‘Dr Bawa-Garba made mistakes, but to properly learn from these they must be viewed in the context in which she was working.’

Charlie Massey, chief executive of the GMC, defended its decision. He said: ‘It is really important that we differenti­ate between this case, where a doctor was convicted of gross negligence manslaught­er, and everyday mistakes.’

 ??  ?? Error: Hadiza Bawa-Garba and Jack Adcock
Error: Hadiza Bawa-Garba and Jack Adcock
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