2015职称英语考试《卫生类》新增文章:Inquest told of hospital
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第十二篇 Inquest told of hospital error
A HOSPITAL error left a dying man on the wrong ward for two days as deep vein thrombosis (DVT) ravaged his body,an inquest heard. Stephen Melvin Newbold suffered massive brain damage when a blood clot formed in his veins. Now his families are considering legal action against York Hospital,saying that his death was "untimely and unnecessary"。
Mr Newbold,a 52-year-old maintenance worker,went to York Hospital on November 3 complaining of a swollen right foot. He should have been sent to a surgical ward where he would have been treated with 1 Fragmin,a drug which counters the effects of DVT. However,hospital staff wrongly admitted him to 2 an orthopedic ward,where he stayed for two days,before finally being transferred to the care of a consultant vascular surgeon. Twenty-four hours later,on November 6,doctors decided they would have to operate to remove his leg below the knee.
The operation went ahead on November 10,but two days later Mr Newbold suffered a cardiac arrest. A scan revealed he had had a pulmonary embolism,a condition related to DVT. Mr Newbold suffered brain damage and died in the hospital on November 16.
Giving evidence,the surgeon said he could not explain why Mr Newbold had been admitted to an orthopedic ward where it was not policy to administer Fragmin. He did not know why his medical team had not given Mr Newbold the drug later.
York coroner Donald Coverdale said,"From November 3 until the day of the operation,no Fragmin was given to Mr Newbold. If he had been admitted to a consultant vascular surgeon's care from day one,it is clear that Fragmin would have been prescribed.
Fragmin reduces the risk of DVT,but does not eliminate it. It is impossible to say whether Mr Newbold would have suffered this DVT if he had received the Fragmin." He recorded a verdict of death by misadventure.
Kim Daniells,Mr Newbold's family's lawyer,said,"The family hope that the hospital will learn from the errors,and that no other families will have to suffer in the future."
A spokeswoman for York Hospital's NHS Trust said,"We would like to extend our sincere sympathies to the family of Stephen Newbold during this difficult time."