logo
Doctor at Margate hospital learnt 'big lesson' after baby death

Doctor at Margate hospital learnt 'big lesson' after baby death

BBC News21-05-2025
A doctor has said he learnt a "big lesson to be more compassionate" after a baby's death at a Kent hospital. Archie Squire died of a rare heart condition just days after his first birthday following repeated visits to Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother (QEQM) Hospital in Margate.Dr Ravi Kumar, a paediatric registrar who works at the hospital, said at an inquest into the one-year-old's death it had been an "extraordinary case". "This has been difficult for all of us," he said. "I am sorry."
A report by East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust found that during Archie's treatment opportunities to diagnose him appropriately, which could have prevented his death, were "missed".The trust said it offered its "heartfelt condolences to Archie's family.""We will work with the coroner to give the family answers," it added.
'Cold and pale'
Archie died in the early hours of 23 November 2023 following two cardiac arrests.His parents had made repeated visits to hospital over his life, concerned about Archie's breathing, constipation and vomiting. Dr Kumar, who saw Archie at the start of his night shift on 22 November, said his first impression was the toddler was "not well". "He was irritable," he said. "He was cold and pale."
The inquest, held at North East Kent Coroner's Court in Maidstone, heard Archie's condition had deteriorated in the early hours of the morning. "He was not responding," Dr Kumar said, adding he had conveyed his concerns to the consultant and brought Archie from the ward for observation.The court heard that hospital staff were treating Archie with a "working diagnosis" of bronchiolitis – an infection of the respiratory tract.When asked by the barrister acting for Archie's family, Emily Raynor, if he should have considered alternative causes for the baby's illness and multiple hospital visits, Dr Kumar said he "did not consider it that night".
Archie's mother Lauren Parrish, from Dover, recalled her son being labelled a "mystery child" because doctors were not sure what was wrong with him.The family has previously said in a joint statement that "fundamental failings" remained at the hospital that were putting children and babies at risk. "Parents are being ignored and opportunities are still being missed," they added. The inquest started on 19 May and is set to last six days.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Huge 22-inch rat found in home
Huge 22-inch rat found in home

Telegraph

time2 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Huge 22-inch rat found in home

An enormous 22-inch rat, thought to be the UK's biggest, has been captured at a home in the north of England. The rodent was discovered in a property in the Normanby area of Redcar and Cleveland by a pest controller. Conservative councillors have blamed the Labour-run council for the supersize pest, as they no longer handle domestic rat infestations and expect residents to foot the bill themselves. It comes as Birmingham has been plagued by rats because of growing mountains of uncollected waste amid a months-long bin strike. The crisis reached the point where officials in England's second city introduced a new 'rat tax' for locals if they call out council pest controllers. Glasgow was also hit with a rat crisis in 2023 when giant rats the size of 'small dogs' turned a street in the city into a no-go zone for refuse workers. The biggest rat on record to have been caught in Britain was by a Bournemouth rat catcher in 2018. It measured 21 inches from snout to tail. It is understood that the huge rat in Normanby was nesting in the property at the time. Cllr Taylor, who was sent the image by a local constituent, claimed that the rat 'was almost the size of a small cat'. 'The rats are getting more brazen everywhere now. It seems they have settled into the neighbourhood,' he told The Telegraph. 'I have dealt with rats in the past; it's certainly the biggest I've seen. It's a big concern that it was found in someone's home.' Cllr David Taylor has now urged the Labour-run council to take urgent action to tackle the problem and called for a full vermin study to be carried out across the borough, as well as joint action involving businesses, landlords and social housing providers. He warned: 'The longer this is ignored, the worse it will get. It is a growing problem.' It is estimated that there could be around 250 million rats in the UK, and they can carry illnesses which can be passed to humans, including Weil's disease, which has flu-like symptoms initially but can lead to jaundice and kidney failure. A Redcar and Cleveland council spokesman said: 'The council has a dedicated pest control officer who manages pest issues on council-owned land. 'While we no longer provide a wider pest control service, we do offer advice to residents where possible. 'The council continues to work with Beyond Housing, Northumbrian Water and other partners to address complex issues and explore potential solutions. 'There is also helpful guidance and preventative measures on our website to support people in dealing with pests.'

Trump dubbed himself the ‘father of IVF' on the campaign trail. But his pledge to mandate insurance cover has disappeared
Trump dubbed himself the ‘father of IVF' on the campaign trail. But his pledge to mandate insurance cover has disappeared

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Trump dubbed himself the ‘father of IVF' on the campaign trail. But his pledge to mandate insurance cover has disappeared

Donald Trump's vow to expand in vitro fertilization (IVF) access to millions of Americans is on hold, with White House officials backing away from plans to require Obamacare health plans to include the service as an essential health benefit, the Washington Post reported on Sunday. The Post reported that White House officials have privately moved away from the prospect of pushing for legislation to address the issue despite it being one of Trump's signature campaign promises, citing two persons with knowledge of internal discussions in Trumpworld. A senior administration official also acknowledged to the newspaper that changing Obamacare to force insurers to cover new services would require congressional action, not an executive order. The president has governed largely by executive fiat in his second term as he grapples with a closely-divded Congress and an unruly GOP majority in the House of Representatives. He's used those executive orders to dismantle whole parts of the federal government, including USAID and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). The president even tried to take an axe to the Department of Education, though that battle is still being waged in the courts. The Supreme Court recently cleared the way for Trump to cut roughly a quarter of the agency's staff. But many of Trump's campaign promises lie outside of his ability to influence via the hiring or firing of people and redirection of agency resources or agendas. In 2024, he laid out no direct path for his goal to expand IVF access, only telling voters that insurance companies would be forced to cover it. Still, he proclaimed himself the 'father of IVF' at at Fox News town hall, and promised during an NBC News interview: 'We are going to be, under the Trump administration, we are going to be paying for that treatment. We're going to be mandating that the insurance company pay.' At the time, there was little to no acknowledgment of the fact that many if not most conservatives still oppose the Affordable Care Act and the same healthcare exchanges which Trump was now promising to utilize as he sought to use the power of the federal government to expand healthcare coverage. Now, with the passage of Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' without any provisions expanding IVF access, and with the prospect of further policy gains before the midterms growing dimmer, it's unclear when the White House would have another chance to press the issue in Congress. In February, the president signed an executive order directing his advisers to 'submit to the President a list of policy recommendations on protecting IVF access and aggressively reducing out-of-pocket and health plan costs for IVF treatment.' It's been crickets on the issue since then. In 2024, many of Trump's critics and the media pointed out that the policy would essentially amount to a reversal or at the very least coming in sharp contrast to the first Trump administration's efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which ended in failure, and a contradiction of the conservative view that government should not exercise that level of control over Americans' health care decisions. The president's promise thrilled his party's natalists, embodied by Vice President JD Vance and an army of right-wing immigration hawks who fear the changing American demographics brought on as a result of falling birth rates and high levels of migration. It also wowed some of his Democratic and left-leaning critics, who see the policy as a means of furthering their goal of expanding access to healthcare for poorer Americans. For Vance, the issue of declining U.S. birth rates predates his MAGA heel-turn. In 2019, he told a gathering of conservatives in Washington: 'Our people aren't having enough children to replace themselves. That should bother us.' 'We want babies not just because they are economically useful. We want more babies because children are good. And we believe children are good, because we are not sociopaths,' the future vice president added at the time. Two years later, he'd tell a right-leaning podcast: 'I think we have to go to war against the anti-child ideology that exists in our country.' During the 2024 campaign, those views emerged again as Vance attacked Democrats as 'childless cat ladies' and leaned heavily into attacking the left for supposedly being anti-family. Progressives fought back, pointing to efforts to expand the child tax credit and other benefits that aid young families under Joe Biden and other Democratic administrations, including the passage of Barack Obama's signature law: the Affordable Care Act.

Jessie J treated in hospital for infection after breast cancer surgery
Jessie J treated in hospital for infection after breast cancer surgery

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Jessie J treated in hospital for infection after breast cancer surgery

The pop singer Jessie J has revealed she returned to hospital with an infection and fluid on her lungs six weeks after having breast cancer surgery. The 37-year-old, whose real name is Jessica Cornish, told fans on Instagram on Sunday about the setback, sharing a picture of an IV cannula in her arm. The singer, who said in July that she had seen 'no cancer spread' since her operation in June, added that she has since discharged herself. She wrote: 'Six weeks post surgery and I was back in the same ward I was after my surgery. Not expected or planned. 'I had and still have symptoms that pointed towards a blood clot on the lung, it is not a blood clot thank God. 'They ran a lot of tests, which ended up showing I have an infection (still trying to figure out what) and a little fluid on my lungs. 'Finding it hard to breathe in, but I discharged myself last night (I hate being in hospital) and will continue the investigation as an outpatient.' The London-born mother of one added that it was 'frustrating' that her career plans had to change due to her surgery and hospital visits, and added that she had been 'working so hard to get to this point and excited to do it all'. She said: 'I know for me, the true hard journey of this whole thing physically was the day I went into surgery. 'The recovery physically is far from quick or easy, and mentally it's been the most challenging time for me, especially as a mum with a toddler and being unable to be the mother I usually am.' The star said her visit to hospital was a 'reminder to myself to slow down' even though she felt she was already at a slow pace. Jessie J added: 'This isn't a speedy recovery and it isn't meant to be. That slow pace has been a hard reality to accept to be honest. 'I love moving and working and being up and active but I can't be right now, and that's what it is, and I am finding the strength knowing that all can be adjusted to align with a slower pace and the support of my very small inner support circle.' The London-born singer welcomed her son, Sky Safir Cornish Colman, in 2023, having had a miscarriage in November 2021. Her long-term partner is Chanan Colman, a basketball player. She has had health problems throughout her life, having been diagnosed with a heart condition aged eight, suffering a minor stroke aged 18, and having briefly gone deaf in 2020. She has had three No1 songs in the UK singles chart – Domino, Price Tag, and Bang Bang. She was awarded four Mobo awards in 2011 including best UK act, best newcomer, best song for Do It Like A Dude and best album with Who You Are, and won the Brit Award for rising star in 2011.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store