UK Girl, 8, died of sepsis after being sent home by GP who said hospital was full

Beyond disgusting. Bitch and complain about the US medical system all you want, but am sure she would have been treated somewhere. If one hospital here is full you are sent to another. My primary care doctor is the other way around. If she isn't sure she sends me to a specialist or to the hospital. Shit, if she doesn't like what she sees in my blood work she has me go back and do it again. And I bet here in the USA that little girl would have had a very good chance of a full recovery. Fuck the UK, a rapidly failing state, and truly fuck their National Health System. That's one of the reasons I don't leave the country. Know my shit can be fixed anywhere in the USA, simply do not trust ANY foreign medical system.


Girl, 8, died of sepsis after being sent home by GP who said hospital was full​


An eight-year-old girl died of sepsis after being sent home by a GP who said the local hospital was full.

Mia Glynn visited a GP surgery twice in four hours, but her parents Soron, 39, and Katie, 37, were told by the doctor to take her home despite presenting symptoms of Group A Strep.

Her parents, from Biddulph, Staffordshire, first took Mia to the doctor after she had begun vomiting, had a severe headache and complained of a sore throat on Dec 5, 2022.

On the morning of Dec 8, her parents took Mia, who had developed a temperature and severe headache, back to the GP surgery.

A nurse practitioner told her mother that Mia’s symptoms were viral and advised her to give her daughter fluids and paracetamol.

But Mia returned to the surgery just after midday and was sent home following an examination by a GP.

Despite asking whether she had the infection Group A Strep, which was prevalent at the time, a doctor advised Mia’s mother to give her fluids and ibuprofen and to wait to start the antibiotics when Mia went to bed.

They were told to take their daughter home because the hospital was full and they would have to wait in a corridor.

Mia slept in her parents’ bed that night but woke up in the early hours of Dec 9, disorientated and with blue lips and rashes on her arms and legs.

She complained of feeling hot but was cold to touch.

After being rushed to the hospital by ambulance, Mia was given intravenous fluids and antibiotics, but went into suspected septic shock and suffered a cardiac arrest around 15 minutes after arriving at the hospital.

Despite resuscitation attempts, she died around 20 minutes later.

Mia’s cause of death was given as sepsis caused by Group A Strep infection.


Following Mia’s death, her parents, who also have a son Beau, 12, instructed expert medical negligence lawyers to investigate her care and secure answers.

Speaking publicly for the first time since Mia’s death, her mother Katie said: “Our world and hearts broke forever when our beautiful daughter was snatched away from us.

“Mia had been taken to the doctors twice to be told her symptoms were viral. Around 15 hours later she died of sepsis.

“The unbelievable and unbearable pain we feel is unexplainable and unimaginable.

“Our beautiful healthy girl was the happiest, brightest, most loving and caring girl who smiled, danced, brought joy and love to everyone she met.

“She brought so much laughter and fun.”

After Mia’s death, her family and well-wishers raised more than £40,000 in Mia’s memory through fundraising events, including sponsored runs and local business donations.

The family has donated more than £16,000 to the UK Sepsis Trust and has set up the charitable organisation aiM – an anagram of Mia’s name – in their daughter’s memory.

Mia’s mother added: “We’ll never get over the pain of losing Mia, especially in the way we did.

“Our family will never be the same without Mia. She had her whole life ahead of her and was taken from us in the cruellest way imaginable.


Her father, an engineering teacher, said: “Seeing Mia in her final moments was awful.

“We feel so blessed that she was our daughter but are completely heartbroken that Mia was taken from us so soon.

“A lot of people may have heard of sepsis but it’s only after what happened to Mia that we realise just how dangerous it is.”

He added: “We need to educate the public and health professionals to identify the signs of sepsis and ask the question “could it be sepsis?”.

Victoria Zinzan, the specialist medical negligence lawyer representing the couple, said: “Sadly through our work we see too many families affected by sepsis; with Mia’s death vividly highlighting the dangers of the condition.

“Early diagnosis and treatment is key to beating sepsis, therefore it’s vital people know what signs to look out for when it comes to detecting this incredibly dangerous and life-threatening condition.”


 
These are vague symptoms and literally could have been anything. For children vomiting for 12+ hours while being unable to tolerate fluids, or a fever that doesn’t respond to paracetamol, or no urine output in 24 hours (might be less) is instant emergency & a trip to A&E
By the time a kid is 8, even if it's an only child, parents know the difference between "stomach flu again, put towels on the floor by the bed" and "something is really not right here." In my country- the USA, which for now is still technologically advanced and semi-civilized- even our DEI hire docs and online diploma NPs know that if a parent comes in twice in a day and says "something is really not right" you get real interested in finding out what's really going on, because those instincts are real. In fact it's drilled into people's heads in peds training rotations.

NHS is being staffed by people from countries where if kid number 3/8 doesn't work out you just throw him in the Ganges and hope for better luck next time. Not every culture values human life like Christendom did. Live and learn- as society repaganizes all across the West, you sure as hell will!
 
Not for nothing, but taking the kid to another hospital isn't an option?

And being in a bed in a corridor is a better option than going home. She would still be under medical care at that point, just not in a room. It happens here in the states when the rooms are full and the ER is waiting for one to open up.
 
Did anybody ask or check if the child had any allergies to penicillin? Because what is described here sounds a lot more like an Anaphylactic reaction brought on by the antibiotics. And made worse when they started pumping more of same into her as soon as she hit the ER.

While Sepsis is deadly, that seems fast for Sepsis.
 
There are plenty of rural areas in the US where the hospitals have shut down because they aren't profitable enough. There's absolutely no guarantee there'd be another hospital nearby in the US.
Even in the most rural of rural America, Doc-In-A-Box clinics exist and every county has an EMS service that can expedite to the nearest hospital when called. You take a sick kid into a local clinic and the doc swabs for strep and it comes back positive, at the very least he's ordering antibiotics and maybe IVs, but if it's bad enough the kid is riding in the ambulance.
 
Did anybody ask or check if the child had any allergies to penicillin? Because what is described here sounds a lot more like an Anaphylactic reaction brought on by the antibiotics. And made worse when they started pumping more of same into her as soon as she hit the ER.

While Sepsis is deadly, that seems fast for Sepsis.
Is that fast for sepsis?

I have seen someone get a minor blister from borrowed flip flops while on vacation. They were totally fine. Suddenly felt ill like that had the flu. Laid in bed through the night and woke up to red line & lesions on the affected foot. Took them to the urgent care center where they were denied treatment - because they needed an Emergency Room. They had to get X-rays for suspected gangrene and ended up on heavy IV antibiotics. All within 12 hours of feeling sick - from a sandal blister.

Definitely made me appreciate modern medicine and the fragility of life.
 
Did anybody ask or check if the child had any allergies to penicillin? Because what is described here sounds a lot more like an Anaphylactic reaction brought on by the antibiotics. And made worse when they started pumping more of same into her as soon as she hit the ER.

While Sepsis is deadly, that seems fast for Sepsis.
This does not sound like anaphylactic reaction at all. One day is plenty of time for sepsis to develop.
 
Even in the most rural of rural America, Doc-In-A-Box clinics exist and every county has an EMS service that can expedite to the nearest hospital when called. You take a sick kid into a local clinic and the doc swabs for strep and it comes back positive, at the very least he's ordering antibiotics and maybe IVs, but if it's bad enough the kid is riding in the ambulance.

They gave her paracetamol and ibuprofen. They had no idea what it really was.
 
There are plenty of rural areas in the US where the hospitals have shut down because they aren't profitable enough. There's absolutely no guarantee there'd be another hospital nearby in the US.
Beyond the most rural, which would also be SOL in under a British NHS-style scheme, there's not a snowballs chance in hell you're more than a few hours from another hospital. Hell, almost all are still within 15 miles, which in rural communities means 15 min or less driving time.
 
Did anybody ask or check if the child had any allergies to penicillin? Because what is described here sounds a lot more like an Anaphylactic reaction brought on by the antibiotics. And made worse when they started pumping more of same into her as soon as she hit the ER.

While Sepsis is deadly, that seems fast for Sepsis.
It's not fast at all for sepsis, in particular sepsis in an otherwise healthy child. Children compensate, compensate, compensate- then crash in the blink of an eye .Which again, is why it's drilled into your head in USA peds rotations, if something "just feels off" you look deeper and find out what you're intuiting because it could be the only warning sign you get before the kid bottoms out beyond help.

"RN says patient seems off" will get a neonatologist sprinting like no alarm bell in the ward could.
 
Beyond the most rural, which would also be SOL in under a British NHS-style scheme, there's not a snowballs chance in hell you're more than a few hours from another hospital. Hell, almost all are still within 15 miles, which in rural communities means 15 min or less driving time.
Things get bad enough, the helicopter ambulance comes.

In our area there are three hospitals, one a level 1 trauma center, within 15 miles.
 
Glad I can pay large amounts of money to actually be seen by a doctor and treated so I don't die on a waiting list. Imagine actually being British/Canadian in current year.
Never been on a waiting list for treatment in my entire life. Sometimes I have been called to set up an appointment. Had open-heart on a date of my choice. Had spinal fusion about 24 hours after doctor's appointment. Recent retina surgery was scheduled to meet doctor's surgery schedule at that hospital, waited three weeks or so, no big deal, result worth the wait.
 
Played "guess the race" before opening the thread and was correct.

There are plenty of rural areas in the US where the hospitals have shut down because they aren't profitable enough. There's absolutely no guarantee there'd be another hospital nearby in the US.
Retarded. The entire incident is from december 5th to december 9th. Even cutting this down to apparently serious symptoms (GP visits) it would appear to be about 20 hours between "morning" on the 8th and "early hours" on the 9th. There is nowhere in the US where you're more than a couple hours at most from a hospital.

Anyway this might be an unpopular opinion but this is entirely a skill issue on the parents part. "We've taken our child to the doctor twice in four hours because she looks really sick and we're worried about A strep. Rajesh ignored our concerns and told us to go home so I guess we'll just let our child die ¯\_ (ツ)_/¯ ". If you need more evidence for this look no further than:
The family has donated more than £16,000 to the UK Sepsis Trust and has set up the charitable organisation aiM – an anagram of Mia’s name – in their daughter’s memory.
Maybe if they donate the rest of the 40k so their other kid doesn't have a college fund the UK can discover what causes sepsis and tell all their doctors about it.
 
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