FAS has upgraded our forum security. Some members may need to log in again. If you are unable to remember your login information, please email food.allergy.supt@flash.net and we will help you get back in. Thanks for your patience!

Author Topic: Allergy death in Australia  (Read 4243 times)

Description:

Offline Penny

  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,514
Allergy death in Australia
« on: December 12, 2017, 09:35:36 PM »
I'm not sure if I'm posting this in the right area. If it doesn't belong here, please move it to where it should be.

https://www.stuff.co.nz/world/australia/99805161/an-australian-boy-died-from-an-allergic-reaction-to-his-hospital-breakfast


An Australian boy died from an allergic reaction to his hospital breakfast. Louis Tate always carried his EpiPen with him.

But for more than a decade, the Australian teen never had to use it, despite being diagnosed with a severe allergy to cows' milk, nuts and eggs when he was a baby.

So the last place his parents Gabrielle Catan and Simon Tate expected things to go wrong was in hospital, when Louis was admitted overnight to Frankston Hospital, in Melbourne, with asthma just over two years ago.

Louis, 13, suffered a fatal anaphylactic reaction in the children's ward after eating a "spoonful" of a breakfast of Weet-Bix and soy milk.

His death is believed to be the first fatality linked to food preparation at a Victorian hospital.

"Because he was in hospital, I thought the medical staff would know exactly how to take care of him," his mother, Catan, said.

"I didn't felt like I needed to say anaphylaxis is a life-threatening condition."

The opening day of the coroner's inquest into Louis' death has raised serious questions about Frankston Hospital's procedures for patients with allergies, and also about the investigation that took place in the wake of the death.

Irene Fisher, the patient services assistant who was responsible for serving breakfast at the ward on the day of Louis' death, said that a whiteboard which normally detailed food allergies did not have Louis listed on it.

Fisher said she had instead been verbally told about the allergies by a nurse when she began her shift.

Louis was admitted to Frankston Hospital on October 22, 2015, after coming home from school with laboured breathing.

His mother said she had left the hospital early the next morning to let her son sleep, with firm instructions for the nurse about what he should eat when he woke up.

"I told her that the safest food for him for breakfast was Weet-Bix, because it is widely available, and soy milk and if he needed anything else, maybe fruit," Catan said.

"I really thought about the safest, simplest food that he could have that was readily available."

However when Catan called the hospital to check on her son later that morning she was told that he had complained of a tingling sensation in his mouth after eating breakfast.

Hours later he was dead – his heart had stopped after doctors administered anaesthetic to help him breathe.

Fisher has confirmed that she had supplied Louis with Weet-Bix, soy milk and a glass of water, but also revealed that she had also prepared him toast with packets of jam and butter.

The veteran hospital worker said she had walked into his room with the toast but found it filled with doctors.

Under questioning, she said she never would have given him the toast and butter without checking with the nurse first.

Fisher said later in the day she was asked to supply the soy milk that had been in the ward fridge to someone at the hospital, but could not remember who that person was.

"They wanted the milk to be analysed, that's what they said."

However Catan said when they had met with the hospital the following year she had asked why the breakfast had not been retained for testing.

"We were just told 'Oh, we didn't know that it would go so wrong and he would die," she said.

Helen Hutchins, a ward nurse, said a new computer system has since been introduced at the hospital, where details about patient's allergies can be listed.

In an emotional statement before the inquest began, Louis' father said the family strongly believed the death should have never happened, and that there were failures in the medical treatment he received after eating the breakfast.

"He was in hospital, at a place where he should have been safe. Yet despite us providing clear and concise communications about his food allergies, he died," Tate said.

"Our hope is that this inquest not only provides us with the many answers we need and deserve, but that it closely examines food safety and anaphylaxis management protocols at Frankston Hospital."

The inquest continues.

 - Sydney Morning Herald


Offline GoingNuts

  • Moderator
  • Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 9,715
Re: Allergy death in Australia
« Reply #1 on: December 13, 2017, 05:56:27 AM »
How utterly horrible.  I'm speechless.
"Speak out against the madness" - David Crosby
N.E. US

Offline gvmom

  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 5,150
Re: Allergy death in Australia
« Reply #2 on: December 13, 2017, 11:33:27 AM »
That is shockingly awful and tragic.

I do think of it in terms of DS1's recent hospital episode though.  We never left him, even though he is late teens.  He kept his kit with him at all times, even when taken to go get X-rays & scans.

The food was handled very differently than it was in this article.  A dietician with handheld computer device discussed meals/dietary needs with DS .... and a printout came along with every meal that listed his food allergies. 

We also, thanks to just experience, still didn't trust that we could assume that food was safe.  DS still ordered food with the possibility that they wouldn't know what they were doing as the guiding premise.  We kept a backpack full of safe things for him to eat in case what came was either clearly not safe, or we thought there might even be the slightest problem.  And, we kept his kit with him, holding it when necessary, because just because you are in a hospital it doesn't mean that the medical staff there would have the necessary meds on hand or accessible as quickly as might be necessary.  Honestly, DS's diagnosis wasn't something anyone had come across before and many also hadn't personally encountered life threatening food allergies.

I do think that the allergy to milk and eggs that the boy had substantially increases the difficulty when it comes to safe food in the hospital though.... at least given the choices that DS had.  If he had allergies to those in addition to nuts I don't think he would have eaten anything prepared there.  Many of the menu items had eggs or dairy. 
 
"...who knew that Black History Month was really about an Orange White guy" ~gvmom
"...but HILLARY!" is not ACTUALLY a legal defense in the real world.  ~gvmom
"Don't feed the trolls; nothing fuels them so much." ~Oscar Wilde
Trump=Idiot https://twitter.com/spikedcranium/status/966768001943875584

Offline Macabre

  • Global Moderator
  • Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 29,976
  • Don't Blink!
Re: Allergy death in Australia
« Reply #3 on: December 13, 2017, 06:12:03 PM »
This is terrifying.

I agree with gvmom—dairy and eggs take thing to a whole new level.
Me: Sesame, shellfish, chamomile, sage
DS: Peanuts

Offline PurpleCat

  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,594
Re: Allergy death in Australia
« Reply #4 on: December 13, 2017, 06:16:59 PM »
Horrible!