“There is one thing parents can do to stop these deaths. ”
“Giardia” the doctor told Andrea Shoesmith when she first took her sick four-year old to the doctor.
“She’ll be fine.”
He sent them on their way and went on with his busy workload.
The little girl had been complaining of abdominal pain and loose black bowel motions, she was still playing with her older brother Finn but Andrea just knew something wasn’t right.
The GP later told an inquest that he just did what many doctors do… “take an educated guess.”
Two weeks later his “educated guess” would prove horrifyingly misguided as four-year old Summer would be dead.
The night before she died Summer’s brother Finn, aged seven, alerted his mother to his little sister’s distress. He woke Andrea in the middle of the night telling her “Summer has a bleeding nose.”
When she checked on her the little four-year old, her big brother’s best mate and described by her mother as a “tomboy,” vomited dark red blood.
Her mother called Triple-O and Summer was rushed to hospital but after 15 minutes the Emergency Department at Noosa Hospital sent them on their way with the attending doctor saying Summer had just swallowed blood from a bloody nose and then vomited.
Once again “she’ll be fine.”
Top Comments
Dr.s are not gods and sometimes make terrible mistakes. Especially if they are doing ridiculously long shifts in emergency. I am related to a Dr. who almost killed a patient because he missed something due to being overtired and distracted (he had a lot of stress in his personal life at the time that was impacting on his work). If you feel that you are being dismissed, insist on further attention, ask a lot of questions. Often Dr's will become irritated with "difficult" patients but it's your life or the life of someone close to you that is on the line.
"The GP later told an inquest that he just did what many doctors do… “take an educated guess.”" - Interesting that after 6+ years the best many doctors do is guess, albeit an educated one. But let's criticise those who want to take an active role in their health and well-being.
There's no question we should be more active in performing imaging. In this case, unquestionably this was a poor miss on the first ED admission. And clearly a very inadequate clinical history taken. Always always always talk to children away from mum and dad - they often won't volunteer that they stuck something up their nose or in their eye because they're frightened they will get into trouble. Simple quick low-dose x-ray for this poor baby girl and boom! Clear as day. BUT...if we did that, the radiation/modern-medical-miracle-phobes would crawl out of the woodwork and say oooooh but cancer. So we can diagnose these cases, sure. Problem is, most people aren't prepared to let us. There is not one documented case of medical-radiation-exposure induced cancer. The risk is acknowledged, respected and the safeguards WORK. But people still can't be rational around it and sometimes as a result of stupid fear, it ends up killing poor children like this.
I think that was more of him looking out for himself.
I think doctors tend to go for the most likely cause first. Clearly no one saw Summer swallow the battery, so the most likely cause of a child coming in with those symptoms would be some sort of bug. The idea that the child might have swallowed a battery might not be very high on the list - although I think now it should be.