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Kinmel Lodge care home resident dies after medication overdose

Kinmel Lodge care home resident dies after medication overdose

BBC News4 days ago
A care home resident was given an overdose of medication which contributed to his death, an inquest has heard.Former chip shop owner John Collinson - known as Ricky - from Llanfairfechan in Conwy county died in August 2022, eight weeks after he was given 10 times more than his correct dose of medication over four days.The 88-year-old lived at Kinmel Lodge in Kinmel Bay at the time, and had been mobile and physically active before the error was made, but afterwards became mostly confined to his bed, the hearing in Ruthin, Denbighshire, was told on Monday.A coroner concluded the medication error "more than minimally" contributed to his death.
Mr Collinson died from bilateral pulmonary emboli - a blockage of the lungs - as a result of a deep vein thrombosis, a type of blood clot, the inquest was told.His son, Kevin Collinson, described how the father-of-five had lived at Kinmel Lodge for about two years after developing dementia, and had been started on a low dose the drug risperidone in January 2022, to help calm his outbursts of agitation.He added his dad had been physically mobile, even dancing at Elizabeth II's jubilee celebration just a few weeks before he suddenly became "wiped out" and confined to his bed, and he knew something was not right when he visited on 1 July 2022.Kevin Collinson said he was initially told that nothing was amiss with his father's dosage, but a few days later a manager at the care home realised that he was being given two 2.5ml doses of risperidone instead of the prescribed 0.25ml twice a day.
The inquest heard the error had occurred as a result of a miscalculation after Mr Collinson's medication changed from being administered in pill form to being given in liquid form.Samantha Leuty, the manager of Kinmel Lodge, said that, though it was "no excuse", at the time Mr Collinson was one of the first residents to be given their medication in liquid form.She added the measurements on the syringe provided with the medication had been "unclear", but that practices had since been changed at the care home, with a new digital system introduced for medicine management.Ms Leuty said that as soon as the error was realised, they contacted the GP, who advised the medication be stopped, and informed the family.Giving evidence to the inquest, Dr Abdul Karim Tuma, a psychiatrist with Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, said he had been involved in the treatment of John Collinson and had visited him a few weeks after the overdose, at another care home where he had been moved.He added his impression was that Mr Collinson was "ill, physically and mentally" and "very confused, acutely confused over and above his chronic confusion from his dementia", as well as being "not mobile at all".
John Gittins, coroner for north Wales, east and central, said that following the dispensing errors between 1 and 4 July 2022, Mr Collinson became increasingly "sedated and immobile, and at no time did he return to base level of activity".Following the conclusion, Mr Collinson's daughter, Rhian Collinson, said the family was relieved that the coroner had made the link between the drug overdosing and her father's death, adding it had been a long three years to get to this point.Kevin Collinson described their father as a happy man and prankster who had enjoyed spending time with his family on walks by the seaside.He added that his death was premature and they had been "greedy" for more time with him.
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Could a single brain scan predict the risk of age-related conditions like dementia?
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People age at different rates, partly due to genetics but largely because of lifestyle.A person's rate of aging can indicate how likely they are to develop age-related disorders, such as researchers have developed a method based on a single brain scan in middle age that could predict how fast a person is likely to suggest that their method, which can predict the aging rate of both brain and body, may detect who should implement lifestyle changes to reduce their risk of age-related people appear to age more slowly than others. 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This study, which followed a group of 1,037 people born in Dunedin, New Zealand in 1972–'73, looked at age-related changes in gene methylation to create an epigenetic the Dunedin Study, researchers regularly tested participants' blood pressure, body mass index (BMI), glucose (blood sugar) and cholesterol levels, lung and kidney function, and even gum recession and tooth almost 20 years, they used the overall pattern of change across these health markers to generate a score for how fast each person was the latest study, researchers used a single MRI scan of the brain performed when participants were aged 45, which they correlated with the Dunedin Study aging data. They then developed their DunedinPACNI to estimate rate of aging using only information from the MRI evaluate the Dunedin PACNI as a tool for predicting age-related health outcomes, they analyzed it against datasets from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI), UK Biobank, and Latin American Brain Health found that their prediction accuracy was in line with more established epigenetic with faster DunedinPACNI scores had several indicators of more rapid aging, including:worse balance, slower gait, weaker lower and upper body strength, and poorer coordinationself-reported worse health and more physical limitations poorer performance on cognitive function tests greater childhood-to-adulthood cognitive declineolder physical MacSweeney, MD, CEO and consultant Neuroradiologist at Re:Cognition Health, who was not involved in this research, highlighted how important brain imaging could be, telling MNT that:'The researchers observed that individuals with higher DunedinPACNI scores, indicating faster brain aging, were also more likely to experience health deterioration in other organ systems, such as cardiovascular and respiratory health. 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Women in poorest parts of England and Wales ‘will spend only two-thirds of life in good health'
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time7 hours ago

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Women in poorest parts of England and Wales ‘will spend only two-thirds of life in good health'

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Healthy life expectancy at record low for women in most deprived areas
Healthy life expectancy at record low for women in most deprived areas

The Independent

time11 hours ago

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Healthy life expectancy at record low for women in most deprived areas

Females in the most deprived areas of England and Wales are likely to spend less than two thirds of their life in good health – the lowest figure since recent records began. The inequality gap between men and women has also grown, with those living in better-off parts of England enjoying around two more decades of healthy life. The Covid-19 pandemic, with its increased levels of mortality, is continuing to have an impact on life expectancy estimates, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) which published the figures. Females born between 2020 and 2022 in the most deprived areas of England were likely to spend just 65.1% of their lives in good health, compared with 81.5% in the least deprived areas, the ONS found. The estimate for the most deprived areas is the lowest since the time series began in 2013-15, when it stood at 66.3%. For males born in 2020-22, the proportion of life expected to be spent in good health was 70.4% for those in the most deprived areas and 84.5% for those in the least deprived. The figure for males in the most deprived parts of England is broadly unchanged on recent years. The gap in healthy life expectancy between females born in the most and least deprived areas has widened from 19.6 years in 2013-15 to 20.2 years in 2020-22, while for males it has grown from 18.7 to 19.1. Greg Ceely, ONS head of population health monitoring, said: 'The pandemic led to increased mortality, the impact of which is seen in our life expectancy estimates. 'However, not everyone was impacted equally. 'The biggest decline in life expectancy was seen in the most deprived areas. 'Healthy life expectancy also declined, and in England and Wales women in the most deprived areas were expected to spend the lowest proportion of life in 'good' health – the smallest since our records began.' Figures for Wales cannot be compared directly with England, due to different systems of measuring deprivation. But the proportion of life that females born in 2020-22 in the most deprived areas of Wales are likely to spend in good health, 61.5%, is the lowest since those estimates began in 2013-15. The equivalent figure for women born in the least deprived areas is 80.7%. For males in Wales, the proportions were 70.2% for the most deprived areas and 83.6% for the least deprived. Although the latest estimates represent a drop compared with the pre-pandemic period, this does not mean a baby born between 2020 and 2022 will necessarily go on to live a less healthy life. Improvements in mortality rates in the future would lead to increases in life expectancy estimates, the ONS noted.

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