Baby not given antibiotics ‘until after cardiac arrest’

Baby not given antibiotics ‘until after cardiac arrest’

PA Media Ben Condon, a young baby looking at the camera. He is wearing a knitted white hat and cardigan.PA Media
Ben Condon died at two months old in 2015

A baby suffering with a respiratory illness was not given prescribed antibiotics until after he suffered the first of two cardiac arrests, an inquest heard.

Ben Condon, who was born prematurely, was two months old when he died at Bristol Children’s Hospital in April 2015.

He was being treated in the intensive care unit for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and metapneumovirus (hMPV), which are similar to the common cold in adults.

University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust has previously admitted a failure to give Ben antibiotics sooner contributed to his death.

A previous inquest recorded Ben’s death as being caused by ARDS, hMPV and prematurity, but this was quashed by the High Court after new evidence emerged.

Ben’s parents, Allyn and Jenny Condon, from Weston-super-Mare, fought hard for a second inquest which is under way at Avon Coroner’s Court.

The inquest heard Ben had developed a pseudomonas bacterial infection before his condition deteriorated and he died having suffered two cardiac arrests.

Mr Condon previously claimed doctors “intentionally” did not disclose his son had the infection until after he was cremated.

Ben's parents are sat inside a house with a kitchen, bookshelves and plant in the background. They are both straight-faced, looking at the camera.

Ben’s parents, Allyn and Jenny Condon, fought for a second inquest into their son’s death

On Thursday, a junior doctor on the unit told the court she did not return to Ben with antibiotics after another patient needed urgent attention.

Dr Jessica Spaull told the inquest she could not recall a conversation with a consultant about giving Ben antibiotics, other than it would be “reasonable to start”.

“I recall I was in the process of doing that [writing up the prescription] when another of my allocated patients… when their endocrinal tube was accidentally removed,” she said.

“I recall I went over to that bed in an emergency, and I recall that I was involved re-intubating that patient.

“That meant I had not completed that prescription at that point.”

She realised the prescription had not been administered while completing a handover for the evening shift.

“I recall looking at the drug chart and realising that the antibiotic prescribed earlier hadn’t been given,” she said.

AFP A small baby in a white and light blue babygrow is being held upright. His head is small enough to fit into the hand of the person holding him. A feeding tube is coming out of his nose.AFP

Ben Condon died in April 2015

Jennifer MacLeod, representing the Condon family, asked Dr Spaull whether there was a “general consensus” among doctors that Ben’s respiratory illness was caused by a virus, rather than a bacterial infection.

Dr Spaull said in response she did not “and still does not have the expertise to have formulated ideas about ARDS causality” because of a lack of experience in that area.

Ms MacLeod asked whether there was a “level of complacency” about how poorly Ben was.

Dr Spaull said the question was hard for her to answer, because at the time she was a junior doctor and was only five weeks into her first placement on a paediatric intensive care unit.

The inquest continues.

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