By court reporter Candice Prosser.
A 10-year-old girl’s death from a herpes infection, which multiple doctors failed to diagnose, has led a South Australian coroner to urge parents be better educated about the effects of the virus and the need for continuity of medical care.
Briony Caitlin Klingberg died two years ago after she had been ill for a week.
The court heard her mother had taken her to the Adelaide Women’s and Children’s Hospital, Mount Barker Hospital and the family GP ahead of her death.
Coroner Mark Johns said the family GP had not taken appropriate action, but he also urged there be a community campaign to ensure parents recognised the importance of continuity of care.
Briony died of multiple organ failure, the court heard, and had been a “healthy and strong” child before she became ill.
Her mother initially took her to the Women’s and Children’s Hospital, where a senior doctor offered the girl could be kept in for observation or taken home if the family preferred.
“She said that she and her husband had the sense that they should not come back unless Briony got worse,” the coroner said in his findings.
“As a result, they would decide not to return to the Women’s and Children’s Hospital. Instead they took her to the local hospital at Mount Barker on the assumption that they would advise to take Briony to the Women’s and Children’s Hospital if that was necessary.”