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You see, this is what I just don't get; here we have an account of a very experienced doctor which, on the face of it seems completely damning with the implication of guilt (or at the very least extreme, almost willful, incompetence) towards LL, yet it appears that absolutely nothing at all is done in response to it. No attempt to discipline, investigate, assess a need for re-training, or anything else, nothing!I think, if guilty, Baby K's case highlights two things.
1:How quickly LL is allegedly able to take advantage of an opportunity to harm a baby or is possibly already waiting for one.
2: How little time is needed to allegedly achieve the result.
Baby K's designated nurse had only left room 1 at 3.47am and by 3.50am LL was found standing over Baby K whose breathing tube (that had been secured down with tape) had been dislodged),whose chest wasn't moving, and whose oxygen levels were plummeting with no alarm sounding.
If LL IS guilty, and WAS trying to kill Baby K, and HAD paused the monitor, then if Dr Jayaram hadn't been suspicious and gone to check, LL could have been in and out within minutes, or even stayed there till the latest one minute pause ran out, and the alarm went off and claimed to just be there responding to the alarm. We are talking literally minutes. IF guilty of course. IMO
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"The jury has previously been told how Dr Jayaram realised at 03:50am on February 17 that Lucy Letby was alone in Nursery 1 with Baby K, who had been born at 25 weeks.
Mr Johnson said in his opening address: 'Feeling uncomfortable with this because he was beginning to notice the coincidence between the unexplained deaths/serious collapses and the presence of Lucy Letby, Dr Jayaram decided to check on her and (Baby) K.
'As he walked into Room 1, he saw Letby standing over K's incubator. She did not have her hands inside the incubator, but he could see from the monitor that K's oxygen saturation level was falling dangerously to somewhere in the 80s.
'However, the alarm was not sounding as it should have been. Lucy Letby had not called for help and was making no effort to help K.
'Dr Jayaram went straight to treat K and found her chest was not moving. He asked Letby if anything had happened, to which she replied: "She's just started deteriorating now".
The paediatrician found that the infant's breathing tube had been dislodged. 'Whilst it is possible for a baby to cause this if sufficiently active, K was not only very premature but she was sedated and inactive.
'The tube was secured by tape and attached to K's headgear. Its dislodging can happen accidentally on handling, but any member of staff responsible for such an accident would realise straight away.
'Dr Jayaram was troubled as Nurse Letby had been the only person in the room'.
Mr Johnson said that the monitors in Nursery 1 were set to activate automatically if readings fell outside neonatal values.
He added: 'Given the values witnessed by Dr Jayaram, the alarm should have sounded. There is an alarm pause button on the screen of the monitor, and by pushing this the operator can pause the alarm for one minute. It will then reactivate unless paused again.
'Bearing in mind the rate displayed on the monitor, Dr Jayaram estimates the tube would have been dislodged between 30-60 seconds before he entered the room. This would be on the assumption that the alarm had been cancelled/suspended once only'."
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Lucy Letby trial: Doctor interrupted nurse 'as she attempted murder'
Dr Ravi Jayaram described the moment he encountered nurse Lucy Letby 'making no effort to help' as a baby's oxygen level began to plunge.www.dailymail.co.uk
To me, IMO, an account such as this is bordering on the fantastical and is on the very outer verges of believability. Do professional medics actually brush off events like this as a matter of course?