Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Inquest opens into death of woman, 84, who died after spending freezing night outside care home in Stamford


AN ELDERLY woman died after spending a freezing night outside the care home where she lived, an inquest heard today (Tuesday).
Dorothy Spicer, 84, was found lying outside Whitefriars Care Home in St George’s Avenue, Stamford,(owned by the Orders of St John Care Trust) in the early hours of November 26, 2009. It is believed she wandered out from her room sometime the previous evening.
At an inquest into her death at Stamford Town Hall a jury heard that Mrs Spicer, known as Mick, was found by night staff at the home and was taken to Peterborough District Hospital.
She was diagnosed with hypothermia and was given antibiotics to deal with a possible chest infection.
On December 15 she was moved to the John Van Geest Ward at Stamford Hospital where she developed pneumonia. She died at the hospital on January 21, 2010.
Giving evidence, Mrs Spicer’s daughter Jane Howard described the difference in her mother’s condition before and after she was found outside the care home.
Mrs Howard said before November 26 her mother was able to walk between her room and the lounge of the care home without assistance.
She had a “wicked sense of humour” and was able to hold a conversation despite her dementia.
Mrs Howard said: “She could talk about past times with us and could sing along with old songs. Show Me The Way To Go Home was her favourite and she used to sing it to everyone.”
Mrs Howard said she had driven to Peterborough City Hospital on the morning of November 26 after learning what had happened to her mother and had noted the outside temperature displayed on her car’s dashboard as minus 1C.
She struggled to hold back tears as she described her mother’s condition when she arrived at her hospital bed.
She added: “She had the look in her eyes of a petrified animal. It was shocking to imagine my mother had spent a night outside. It is torment to imagine it.”
Mrs Howard told the jury she thought rules or guidelines had been broken and the staff at Whitefriars had let her mother down that night.
The inquest also heard from Patricia Woods, who worked at Whitefriars for 24 years before leaving in 2011.
Mrs Woods was a care leader at the home in November 2010, although she was not on duty at the time Mrs Spicer was found outside.
She told the jury how each external door in the home was locked and alarmed and staff would be alerted via pagers and two wall-mounted displays if a door was opened.
Mrs Woods said if a door was found open a search of the immediate area would be carried out, followed by a headcount.
If a resident was found to be missing, a full search of the grounds and the roads surrounding the house would be made.
She also described how the care leader in charge of the afternoon shift would give notes on each resident to the carers taking over for the night shift.
The jury then heard from engineer Graham Burrows of nurse call system manufacturer Courtney-Thorne.
Mr Burrows said he made a site visit on November 30, 2009, and found no fault in the alarm system.
He explained how computer logs showed an alarm had been deactivated on one of the care home’s external doors at 8.52pm on November 25 and was not reactivated until 9.19pm that evening.
The inquest also heard from two pathologists. Professor Guy Rutty carried out the post mortem examination on Mrs Spicer on January 25, 2012. He concluded that she died from pneumonia which was brought on by the lack of mobility caused by the night spent outside Whitefriars Care Home.
Prof Rutty told the jury the difference in Mrs Spicer’s clinical state before and after she was found outside had changed significantly and this was as a result of the hypothermia she suffered that morning.
But Dr Adam Coumbe, who produced a second report based on Mrs Spicer’s medical notes, said the pneumonia had nothing to do with hypothermia. Dr Coumbe instead told the jury he thought a lack of mobility was caused by a a sudden deterioration in Mrs Spicer’s dementia and this had led to her contracting the infection that killed her.
The inquest will resume tomorrow with the jury expected to hear from two carers who were on duty when Mrs Spicer was found in the Whitefriars grounds.
source: stamfordmercury.co.uk

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Three trapped in four vehicle pile-up at Leeds accident blackspot

Three injured people had to be cut free after a four-vehicle collision at an accident black-spot outside Leeds where three students were killed five years ago.
A fleet of six ambulances and fire crews from West and North Yorkshire were mobilised to deal with the latest crash which happened at 8.30pm on Tuesday (February 14) on the A58 Leeds Road near Wetherby. A van and three cars were involved in the collision about 750 metres from Wetherby police station roundabout, towards Collingham.
Four people suffered spinal, whiplash and other injuries and were taken to hospitals in Harrogate and York.
One suffered a broken leg. Fire crews from Wetherby, Stanks in Leeds, Harrogate and Tadcaster were involved in the rescue.
A Toyota Aygo saloon was a complete write-off.
A Ford Fiesta, Vauxhall Combi van and a Kia saloon all had frontal damage.
Three people were trapped.
Wetherby Watch Commander Jack Farnell led the operation to free them.
“There were two people in the van and one in the Toyota,” he said. “The doors had to come off the van. We had to cut the roof off the Toyota.
“The others were walking wounded. The professionalism of the fire crews and ambulance paramedics working together made this a speedy extraction,” he said.
“There was excellent liaison between the two fire services from North and West Yorkshire, and the paramedics.”
Response
Three fast response ambulance vehicles and three ambulances were involved.
Watch Commander Farnell said: “But drivers should be warned to slow down – this is an accident blackspot,” he said.
In December 2006, three Wetherby student friends, Oliver Cross, Michael Tempest and Thomas Dunn, all 16, died when their Ford Escort was involved in a collision.
Their friend, 17-year-old James Trotman, who was driving, suffered serious injuries but survived.
source: yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk

Asbestos in Scorrier mineshaft uncovered by horse owner


A large quantity of asbestos waste dug up from an old mineshaft is being investigated by the Environment Agency and the Health and Safety Executive.
The waste was excavated during an operation to recover the body of a horse in a field near Redruth.
The animal died when the mineshaft beneath its feet in Scorrier collapsed two weeks ago.
The owner of the horse said it looked as if the asbestos had been thrown down the shaft many years ago.
David Rashleigh, the horse's owner said: "I hired a digger to get the horse out. I was moving nothing but asbestos. I would say there was about ten tonnes of it.
"The bulk of it was corrugated asbestos but there was also white sheet asbestos. I was led to believe that was the most dangerous one."
Mr Rashleigh said he contacted the authorities when he made the discovery.
A spokesperson for the Health and Safety Executive said asbestos waste was supposed to be wrapped in special bags and disposed of only at a licensed site.
The Environment Agency is currently investigating the incident and trying to find out who was responsible for dumping it down the mineshaft.
source: bbc.co.uk

MP hopes fishermen heed lessons of husband's death


A CORNWALL MP whose fisherman husband died in an accident on board his trawler has made an impassioned plea to other commercial skippers to install better safety equipment on their vessels.
Neil Murray, 57, husband of South East Cornwall MP Sheryll Murray, died from multiple injuries after a toggle on the hood of his jacket got tangled in the net as he was hauling it in, an inquest heard on Friday.
The experienced fisherman was working alone and could not reach the lever to stop the net drum on his stern trawler Our Boy Andrew, the hearing was told.
Mrs Murray, who became an MP at the 2010 general election, said after the inquest that, like increasing numbers of fishermen, her husband worked his boat alone because he could not afford the expense of employing a deckhand.
She urged fishermen to take advantage of grants that would pay up to 60 per cent of the cost of having an emergency stop button fitted, and to cut the toggles from the hoods of their sea clothing.
"This might make what's seen as an expense that can be put off for another day affordable now," she said.
"I'd like to urge all working fishermen to cut their toggles off. It's better to lose the cord out of your oilskin than lose your life. Neil didn't do that and he tragically lost his life."
Mr Murray, a father of two, who lived with his wife in Millbrook, South East Cornwall, was found by a lifeboat crew snared in the jammed mechanism around 12 hours after the accident on March 24 last year.
He had suffered multiple injuries, including massive chest injuries and a severed arm.
The inquest in Liskeard heard that an increasing number of fishermen operated their vessels single-handed because they didn't make enough money to employ deckhands.
Mr Murray, who had been fishing for more than 30 years, was described as someone who knew the risks and was very safety-conscious.
A crewman who worked on the boat with him years before had once caught his clothing in the net drum and only avoided death or serious injury when Mr Murray pulled the lever to stop the mechanism.
Mr Murray's vessel was found 24 miles off Fowey by the town's lifeboat. He had been due back in his home port of Looe at 7pm and fishermen from three local ports joined a massive search for the Our Boy Andrew, named after the couple's son.
The jury of four men and four women returned a verdict of accidental death.
Michael Wright, a fellow fisherman based in Looe, said "that "sheer economics" drove the decision to fish alone.
"The catches don't justify two men," he said. "Two men can't make a living out of catches of this size."
Mr Wright added that the net drum on My Boy Andrew had a new gearbox fitted the year before the accident, but that the lever mechanism was jury-rigged with a screwdriver and only Mr Murray knew how to operate it.
Mr Murray's on-board diary showed he had planned to haul in his first catch at 11.40am, and it is thought it was around this time that the accident happened.
Another trawlerman fishing nearby saw the boat moving under power at around noon but saw no sign of Mr Murray on deck.
An investigation into Mr Murray's death by the Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) said a single hood toggle was found three revolutions of the drum from Mr Murray, suggesting it dragged him into the mechanism. He was using the portside net, the furthest from the stop lever.
Detective Sergeant Darren Rosson, a police officer and friend who had grown up near Mr Murray in Cornwall and often fished with him a few months before the accident, described him as an excellent fisherman.
"Safety was always on his mind and I'm sad he died the way he did," he said. "It's a dangerous occupation and I'm sure he won't be the last person to lose his life fishing."
source: thisiscornwall.co.uk

Edinburgh woman makes plea over PIP implants


PIP Implant Claims
A woman from Edinburgh has urged other women to have their PiP implants checked after seeing her ruptured prosthetic for the first time.
Jenny Brown, 41, had her implants removed after she found that one of them had ruptured following a scan and silicon had gone into her lymph nodes.
She said she had been living "a complete nightmare" since she first heard about problems with PiP implants.
Ms Brown admitted to crying when she saw the broken, yellowing prosthetic.
Specialists had found lumps under her right arm and a scan confirmed that the right implant had ruptured and silicon had leaked into the lymph nodes.
She had the implants removed last week.
"When I found out about the rupture I was just terrified," she said. "I'm so relieved to have them out, especially when I saw how damaged these implants were.
"When I saw my ruptured implant for the first time, I just cried."
Ms Brown said she then took the implants home.
"I didn't look at them right after the procedure, but that evening I had a look," she said. "I was quite upset. I couldn't believe that was inside me. It wasn't nice.
"The left one looks intact and it's the colour you would expect it to be, although I noticed on top of it it looks almost like it's sweating - I didn't think it was meant to do that.
"The right one, it's almost as if somebody has slashed it and all the stuff is coming out - and the gel inside it is just breaking up. There were bits falling off it."
She added: "I was quite shocked when I saw the state of my right implant. I was told in my initial consultation that my implants were fine. I think it very important we all get these scans done as soon as possible.
"I was very upset and quite shocked. It's a mess. There were parts of jelly breaking off it as well as I thought: 'Where else has this stuff gone?"'
Ms Brown is involved with the PiP Implants Scotland campaign group, which includes women who have health problems because of the implants, and is calling on the Scottish government to set up a public inquiry into the issue.
As many as 4,000 women in Scotland may have had breast implants made by French company Poly Implant Prostheses (PiP) which used non-medical grade silicone intended for use in mattresses.
However, Holyrood's health committee has suggested that the figure could be as low as 1,300.
No women have received the implants in the Scottish NHS.
'Get justice'
Across the UK, about 40,000 women received the implants, manufactured by PiP which has now closed down.
The owner of PiP, Jean-Claude Mas, was arrested and is facing charges of "involuntary injury".
The UK government has said women given PiP breast implants on the NHS will be able to have them removed for free, with private firms expected to offer the same deal.
While experts concluded there was no evidence to recommend routine removal of the implants, they said they could not entirely rule out that some were toxic.
Ms Brown said: "I never had any symptoms, no pain. I wasn't even aware of the rupture. There was no difference in size and no change in shape either.
"I am angry - when you go into this type of surgery, you think you would have some sign or be aware of that.
"We just want to make sure there is something consistent in place, and not having women just coming away from the clinic and thinking they have time to save up to get them replaced because they could have ruptures in their chest and not be aware of it".
source: bbc.co.uk