2:04pm
The trial is now resuming, with intelligence analyst Claire Tyndall returning to court, to talk through the neonatal unit review schedule in late October 2015.
2:12pm
Nurse Ashleigh Hudson is now being recalled to give evidence in the case of Child I.
2:20pm
The nurse is asked to look at nursing notes she had compiled early on October 22, a summary of the care provided to Child I.
She says Child I's heart rate was normal, the respiration rate was slightly elevated on a one-off reading, while her temperature was stable.
She was in room 1 of the neonatal unit, but "not an intensive unit baby" at this time. She was placed there as "a precaution measure" due to her recent medical history.
She was in an incubator, again as a precautionary measure due to her recent history, the court hears.
The nurse said the oxygen saturation levels, recorded as "96% and above", were "optimal".
2:25pm
Child I was "pink and well perfused", with "minimal aspirates recorded, clear fluid. Abdomen soft and non-distended," according to nurse Hudson's notes.
"She was a very stable baby considering the weeks prior," the nurse tells the court
2:26pm
Child I would still have been classed as an 'HDU' baby [high dependency], as nurses would have had to check the long lines every hour, the court hears.
The nurse says she does not recall anything of note happening during that night shift on October 21-22.
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Recap: Lucy Letby trial, Thursday, February 2
The trial of Lucy Letby, who denies murdering seven babies at the Countess of Chester Hospital neonatal unit and attempting to murder 10 more, is…www.chesterstandard.co.uk
The nursing colleagues mention of that same “cry” as with the statement from baby Es mother is making me feel quite uneasy
Moo
If guilty, I'm wondering if the relationship between either her and the parents, or her and Baby I had been built up into something significant in her head. Possibly because of how long she had allegedly been trying to kill Baby I before she succeeded. And if that's why she marked the occasion with a card and kept a photograph of it on her phone as a "souvenir" .
If guilty of all the alleged crimes then she had been trying to kill babies since June 2015 but hadn''t "succeeded" since Baby E on August 5th. She had also allegedly made more than one attempt to kill babies G and H . Babies F,G,and H all survived her attempts at the time , so Baby I on 23rd October was her first "successful" murder in a while. And maybe that's why she sent the card.
Tbh, I agree with this. Its very common after a medical mistake for professionals to seek reassurance from the patients they messed up on IMO.I am thinking more generally. So in this situation, to hope to alleviate any doubts about her nursing ability in the parents eyes. If they think shes kind, care etc... then she must have done her best etc.. etc... jmo
Imo, she likes to control the narrative, eg with the many texts with colleagues about what she diagnoses is wrong and about what she thinks happened. So this could be an extension of this
i can recall an ex client of mine giving an account of a midwife coming to find her on the neonatal ward. The labour had been complicated, the monitors were not picking up the twins heartbeat correctly, client was ignored despite raising concerns, consequently the baby was oxygen deprived. Midwife wanted to 'hug' the client in the corridor. My point is, it's a common behaviour where there is a guilty conscience.