The Scotsman

Mother seeks apology over child’s death

● Mum made to feel a ‘time-waster’ over daughter’s breathing problems

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE newsdeskts@scotsman.com

A grieving mother who lost her two-year-old daughter to a rare form of lung cancer has told how she had to fight for a GP appointmen­t the day before the child was finally diagnosed.

Kelly Clarkson saw six doctors and five nurses over 28 months with her daughter, Megan, who had developed a bad cough in September 2016.

The 37-year-old mother to Myles, aged five, told The Scotsman that she was made to feel like a “time-waster” after phoning for an appointmen­t as her daughter suffered breathing difficulti­es.

Ms Clarkson eventually saw a GP after arguing with a nurse practition­er at the practice who had called her back to “challenge” her request.

The doctor immediatel­y referred Megan to the Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy where an X-ray showed a “white out” lung, often a sign of pneumonia.

Megan was taken to the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh the next day on 12 December last year where a scan showed she had type three Pleuropulm­onary Blastoma – a rare and aggressive form of lung cancer found in children.

She was operated on and had her whole right lung removed, but suffered a major bleed and cardiac arrest. She died at nine minutes past midnight on 2 January – just three weeks after being diagnosed.

Ms Clarkson is not seeking any financial redress and has not involved the health ombudsman but is seeking an apology from her medical practice in Kirkcaldy and wants staff to learn from their mistakes.

0 Megan with mother Kelly Clarkson, who is asking for an apology from the practice which failed to diagnose her two-year-old’s illness

She said: “Megan was getting progressiv­ely worse – I told the nurse but even when I said that I still had to argue over and over.

“I make the point in my complaint letter that they wanted to have a telephone consultati­on about a two-year-old girl with breathing difficulti­es.

“Why did they not just say – ‘OK let’s get you in to see a doctor?’

“Instead, I had to argue my case, I had to turn into a horrible person and I came off the phone shaking.

“When I went into the doctor’s surgery I felt apprehensi­ve.”

Ms Clarkson has met NHS Fife and her local MSP David Torrance, who has written to Health Secretary Jeane Freeman on her behalf.

She added: “Looking back I just think – why did I have to see so many people before I saw a doctor about a two-yearold girl with breathing difficulti­es?

“I understand nurse practition­ers are trained but sometimes for a bit of reassuranc­e as a parent it would be good to see a GP.

“I felt judged because I work – you’re having to phone in every day for these appointmen­ts at 8:30am and it takes forever to get through – you can be phoning 40 to 50 times just to get to see a doctor or to get an emergency appointmen­t.

“You eventually get through to a receptioni­st, who takes down the details but they pass it on to a triage nurse and my heart sinks when I hear that.

“Then the nurse phoned and on that day I was adamant that I wanted to see a doctor as things had been going on long enough with my daughter.

“They don’t take young people in these situations seriously and they don’t take anything that is not the most obvious answer seriously”.

NHS Fife declined to comment.

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