A spate of baby deaths at Djerriwarrh Health Services in Bacchus Marsh, Melbourne is being investigated by Australia’s health regulator.
A review last year into the deaths of at least 10 babies in just two years found seven of those tragic deaths could have been avoided.
Now, The Guardian reports the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) is conducting a review into those avoidable deaths. It is perusing “thousands of pages of clinical records” in the hope of determining what went wrong, a statement by the agency said.
A review led by obstetrics expert Euan Wallace and released last year by the Victorian government found a series of failures in care at the facility.
Victorian health minister Jill Hennessy said last year that the hospital, on the fast-growing western fringe of Melbourne, had not kept up with local population growth.
“The most concerning risk was the apparent practice of accepting higher risk deliveries at 34 weeks, which were over the capability level of the unit,” the review found.