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Man who died from sepsis ‘was not treated urgently’

Family Handout William Hewes who has brown hair and a beard and is wearing a leather jacket in front of some light pink cherry blossom treesFamily Handout

William Hewes died of sepsis less than 24 hours after he arrived at hospital

A 22-year-old man who died from sepsis did not receive the antibiotics and fluids “with the urgency that he should have”, a coroner has said.

William Hewes died within 24 hours of being admitted to Homerton University Hospital in east London after his meningitis, caused by a meningococcal infection, developed into sepsis in January 2023.

There were delays in giving him potentially life-saving treatment due to communication errors between staff, Mary Hassell, senior coroner for north London, said.

Delivering a narrative verdict, she criticised the hospital but added that “I simply do not know” if earlier treatment would have saved Mr Hewes.

‘In sepsis, every second counts’

His mother, Deborah Burns – who worked as a consultant at the same hospital – said she had asked staff on eight separate occasions if they had given him antibiotics.

“I wasn’t clock-watching but I knew they were not given straight away,” she said.

“I thought the nurse was prioritising other things, medication to treat his symptoms. It wasn’t medication that was going to change the outcome of what he had.”

Giving evidence during the inquest, the medical staff who treated him said they did not recall Dr Burns asking for antibiotics eight times.

Coroner Mary Hassell said she accepted Dr Burns’ evidence on this point, although she accepted the nurse was not being deliberately untruthful but had not listened to what she was being asked.

Homerton Hospital has been contacted for comment.

Family Handout William Hewes is on the right and is the tallest and youngest of his siblings, who are two brothers and a sister. they are all smiling and close together standing in a line in a parkFamily Handout

William, right, was the youngest of his siblings, Theo, Edward and Emily

Following her son’s death, Dr Burns, a specialist in paediatrics, was told that Homerton University Hospital – rated as outstanding by inspectors – was going to investigate the death.

But months later she learned they had decided against an inquiry, as “there were no delays, there weren’t any concerns about his treatment”.

She told the BBC she “couldn’t understand why no investigation had been done… and also why I hadn’t been informed of the outcome”.


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