October 27, 2007
Nurse to sue over her parents’ deaths from hospital superbugSimon de Bruxelles
Edinburgh -- The family of an elderly couple who died within 25 minutes of each other after contracting a hospital superbug are to sue the NHS over their deaths.
Lionel and Rosemary Owen died holding hands in adjacent beds having both contracted Clostridium difficile.
Their daughter Nina Griffith, who is a nurse, claims that the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital (RD&E) discharged her mother, who had contracted C. diff as an outpatient undergoing renal dialysis, knowing that she was a risk to her 80-year-old husband.
The couple spent two days in the same ward before they died a month before their 20th wedding anniversary. Mr Owen was admitted to the RD&E for four days on December 30 with a chest infection. On January 7 his wife was admitted to the intensive care unit suffering from diarrhoea. The next day he was taken to a nursing home with the same symptoms. On January 10 staff switched off their life-support machines. Mrs Owen died of a heart failure and Mr Owen of a brain haemorrhage.
Recording a verdict of misadventure on Mr Owen, Dr Elizabeth Earland, the Exeter and Greater Devon Coroner, said: “Investigations identified that the strain of C. diff identified in Mr Owen and his wife Rosemary are identical. This suggests Mr Owen may well have been exposed to the organism by his wife.” No inquest is to be held into Mrs Owen’s death.
A spokesman for the hospital said it was investigating the deaths.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article2748791.ece