'Lack of communication' cited at Yeovil maternity unit in baby death inquest
13 day-old Daisy May McColl died in February 2022
A Coroner's report has been sent to Somerset NHS Foundation Trust, at the conclusion of an inquest into the death of 13 day-old Daisy May McCoy in February 2022.
She was delivered by Caesarian section at Yeovil District Hospital, in 2022.
The Coroner, Deborah Archer, concluded that Daisy died as a result of an interruption in the blood flow to the brain, which ultimately caused significant damage to her brain and peri natal asphyxia some time before her delivery by Caesarean section on 9th February..
Ms Archer said there was a delay in Daisy’s caesarean being performed, due to a combination of factors which involved a failure to communicate appropriately between staff and a lack of training on recognising the significance of abnormal foetal movements and foetal compromise generally.
Daisy was moved to Southmead Hospital Bristol on 9th February 2022 and died in a Children’s hospice in Barnstaple on 22nd February 2022 .
Although the inquest ultimately determined that the brain injury to Daisy was already present when she attended Yeovil maternity unit and that an earlier delivery would not have made a difference to her survival, the following findings of fact were made as the timing of the injury was an issue at inquest and the delivery process raised a number of concerns .
(a) The Consultant, who was working on-call duty, was not fully aware of the staffing issues on the ward and this meant that she did not fully consider with all the information whether she should have come onto the unit to assist in person.
(b) The Guidance at the time did not include asking a Consultant to attend where there was a presentation outside of the staff’s experience and /or skill set and /or where a significant hypoxic insult was suspected to have already happened.
(c) Because of the high acuity on the ward, no one had the time to escalate matters for help, or make an accurate note, which directly led to no one apart from the Registrar knowing that the Consultant required a call back on Daisy’s abnormal scan within 30 minutes.
(d) The Consultant failed to telephone the ward back after 30 minutes which led to a further delay in the caesarean being commenced.
(e) No professional telephoned the Consultant back as they were not aware of the plan to initiate a call
(f) There was no open discussion between professionals or challenge about whether the initial view of the Registrar that Mrs Mccoy needed a Caesarean was correct.
(g) No one looked at the Dawes Redman criteria at 0028 and no one escalated this and the CTG generally to the Consultant who said that if she had been aware of this at 0028, she would have come onto the ward to assist.
(h) Multiple communication issues as set out above resulted in the parents being left on their own for about an hour with no action being taken and the likely seriousness of the insult being left unexplained
(i) A midwife who gave evidence about the new processes for seeing patients with reduced foetal movements had an incorrect understanding of what the new process was .
Although certain issues were addressed during the inquest, Ms Archer's report says she still remained concerned about the prospect of Yeovil Maternity Unit (which is currently closed) reopening in November 2025, without the below matters being considered:
The MATTERS OF CONCERN are as follows:
- A lack of training to recognise unusual foetal movements / compromise and implementation of such training.
- A lack of familiarity with the processes and polices by midwives to understand foetal compromise.
- A lack of training and policies on rapid escalation of emergency events
- A gap in policy to provide for both Consultants and or midwives to attend in person where understaffing may lead to patient safety being compromised outside of the recognised situations where this is required under the FIGO guidelines.
- A lack of understanding and implementation of the polices that additional staffing in times of high acuity or other emergency situations which if left unaddressed may leave patient safety compromised.
- No culture of appropriate professional challenge.
- A lack of adequate communication between different health care professionals on the maternity unit.
A spokesperson for Somerset NHS Foundation Trust said: “We want to extend our sincere condolences to Daisy’s family at this difficult time. We note the coroner’s report, and we are already working hard to address the points raised, including improvements in training, managing escalation, promotion of appropriate professional challenge, communication and training, as well as ensuring our colleagues fully understand relevant policies and procedures.”