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Coroner rules neglect and gross failure led to baby Sophie Burgess death
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It is a moment cherished by every father. As Gareth Burgess dressed for work, he heard his baby daughter Sophie utter the single word: Dadda.
Hours later, he would gaze into her panic-stricken eyes moments before she died after being given a massive overdose by bungling medics. I felt completely powerless, he said. That morning she had called me Dadda for the first time. Now she was looking at me with this frightened expression. She must have been in so much pain.
The tragedy unfolded after Sophie was rushed to hospital suffering from a fit. Devastatingly, Gareth and his wife Emma learned for the first time at an inquest last week that the 11-month-old should not even have been given the drug that killed her.
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An 11-month-old girl who died in hospital was let down by “a gross failure to provide basic medical care” after she was injected with five times the required dose of an anti-seizure drug, a coroner has ruled.
Sophie Burgess was given a lethal amount of phenytoin, despite the protestations of a nurse who said it was both unnecessary and against protocol.
The baby had initially been taken to St Peter’s Hospital in Chertsey following a seizure, for which she was given phenytoin.
But the child, described by her parents as “a happy baby, always smiling”, vomited, went into cardiac arrest, and died three hours later.
An 11-month-old girl who died in hospital was let down by “a gross failure to provide basic medical care” after she was injected with five times the required dose of an anti-seizure drug, a coroner has ruled.
Sophie Burgess was given a lethal amount of phenytoin, despite the protestations of a nurse who said it was both unnecessary and against protocol.
The baby had initially been taken to St Peter’s Hospital in Chertsey following a seizure, for which she was given phenytoin.
But the child, described by her parents as “a happy baby, always smiling”, vomited, went into cardiac arrest, and died three hours later.
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