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is the witness list available to press....wondering if defense will call the TPN bag producers and pharmacy staff who prepared the bags
He is defending someone accused of exceptionally serious charges and the good Dr's evidence appears to be somewhat inconsistent. I don't think he's being rude at all.Is it just me or is Mr Myers being very rude to Dr J ?
I was actually wondering last week if Dr J was the one behind the screen when LL cried and walked away as I thought he was coming in for baby K , guess not , that was definitely a registrar at the time then.
They can't have been defective, in my view, assuming you mean an error was involved. In fact, personally I would be surprised if the manufacturers even had insulin available to them. IMO someone deliberately gave this child insulin.I am following the case but still struggling how they are so sure the bags were not a defective batch from the ......bag producer...the makers of the TPN bags
hope this is not confirmation bias or whatever the term is
IMOI get what you are saying here but this is all a bit vague for me; with whom did he "raise concerns", when and under what circumstances? He says that is was himself and "other clinicians" raised these concerns - who were they?
Personally, I find this evidence far from satisfactory; I do not believe that a group of clinicians who raised concerns about a staff member's potentially dangerous practices (intentionally or otherwise) in an official capacity would simply be fobbed off by senior management.
All my opinion, obviously.
Hopefully this will explain.It's a verbatim report of things said in court so cannot be sub-judice, I don't think, as long as it accurately attributed to who said it and its context is given. If it was sub-judice the media wouldn't be allowed to report it.
It's correct to say that it's not technically evidence but if that's what the defence are basing their case then then it can't be prejudicial to repeat it.
Willing to be corrected, though and all my own opinion.
My bad on the use of language there - he actually said "dislodged". He also said that it would be obvious to any nurse who had caused it via handling the baby. He obviously noticed it.It's my understanding that the breathing tube was not detached from the ventilator, which is very visible. It would be very unusual to see someone standing there over a disconnected breathing tube because it is so simple to identify and fix that. My understanding of the testimony is that what Dr. Jayram saw was a baby who had falling saturations, who upon observation had no chest movement. This suggests a problem with the position of the tube inside the baby. It can take several moments to determine there is no chest movement. Dr. J walked in when the baby had a saturation of 80% and ... it's possible my unit does things very differently but 80% is not emergent to me. It gets my attention, and I'm over there looking to see what's up. Standing and looking at a baby who's saturation is 80% may very well be standing and visually assessing. This is not doing nothing.
However it sounds like shortly thereafter, the baby's saturation dropped to 40% (this can't really be measured, that just means it's quite low) and this gives more information about what is happening. Dr. J then detached the breathing tube from the ventilator so he could give breaths using the NeoPuff. This lets him give more pressure and a faster rate more easily. He still saw no chest rise, so he removed the breathing tube and gave mask breaths. The baby then recovered, which suggests the problem was with the breathing tube. The breathing tube was not clogged, and earlier the air leak was not an impediment to adequate ventilation. So this the tube must have been misplaced, probably out of the trachea and into the esophagus. The question is - did the breathing tube become dislodged by natural movement of the baby or did someone purposefully pull on it to dislodge it? That is a question I am turning over and over in my mind and I am not sure what I think.
JMO.
Sorry, but I do not think ethnicity played a role here.very very plain speak here - and mods pls delete if its not right - but as a British person of Indian /Asian origin myself - scary and difficult to speak out and accuse for anyone in this situation, but esp so as a non white person. I know that does not excuse a delay. and we still dont even know if LL is innocent or guilty anyway but just talking to possibly why he hesitated and made sure before speaking out . I might not be right at all.
Well, as far as I recall, we've only heard from one person (Dr J) who has personally given evidence about harboring concerns about LL. If other consultants had similar concerns (which Dr J say they did along with him) why have we not heard from them? Perhaps we will in due course?I didnt understand before , but if they were nervous about leaving her three minutes with K, wonder why they waited some more months to transfer her - now i realise there is no 'they' - there were various ppl involved up the chain and decisions were taken only when the higher ups signed off
do we know if she realised why she had been moved to clerical duties for two years 2016-2018 before police made the first arrest - why didnt she move somewhere else and instead do clerical duties ? or are there nurses who do clerical duties roles and it is not unusual - maybe they told her it was a step up ?
JMO here;I get what you are saying here but this is all a bit vague for me; with whom did he "raise concerns", when and under what circumstances? He says that is was himself and "other clinicians" raised these concerns - who were they?
Personally, I find this evidence far from satisfactory; I do not believe that a group of clinicians who raised concerns about a staff member's potentially dangerous practices (intentionally or otherwise) in an official capacity would simply be fobbed off by senior management.
All my opinion, obviously.
Well, as far as I recall, we've only heard from one person (Dr J) who has personally given evidence about harboring concerns about LL. If other consultants had similar concerns (which Dr J say they did along with him) why have we not heard from them? Perhaps we will in due course?
I'm still having great trouble as to why a senior doctor, who was so concerned about the conduct of a nurse that he felt he couldn't allow her to be unaccompanied with a patient for even three minutes, had not tried to move heaven and earth to get her investigated. It's utterly bizarre, IMO.
All IMO, obvs.
Has he, though? He's not stated any names or specific positions, as far as I have seen in the evidence. We don't even know who these "other consultants" are he says held similar reservations about her.how is dr J still going to be able to work there now, after whistleblowing that senior management fobbed off initial concerns
or is even a doctor's career small collateral compared to 17 babies harmed , very very difficult and traumatic case to follow
Has he, though? He's not stated any names or specific positions, as far as I have seen in the evidence. We don't even know who these "other consultants" are he says held similar reservations about her.
In his evidence about walking into the room where LL was standing over baby K he said that he did so in order to "...convince himself he wasn't imagining it or being hysterical.." or words to that effect. Why would one have such self doubt if you knew that several other consultants agreed with him and had already raised concerns the previous year. If you and your peers all agree on something then you are surely way past the point of "doubting oneself"? Yet he says he still had reservations about his feelings in his evidence!
Al MOO, obvs.
I agree with all of this. I'm not convinced by the insulin cases, thugh, as pointed out previously.Baby K’s case is the one I’d been waiting for. A sedated baby whereby LL was allegedly caught in the act having dislodged the breathing tube with the child being close to death.
Having read the evidence it feels all a bit underwhelming, and could very much be a case of Dr J went in there expecting to see a crime being committed, and so that’s what he saw.
It sounds like the baby wasn’t sedated, on the contrary was “active” and had a breathing tube that was too small to the extent that 94% of the air leaked around it. The saturations were “in the 80s”, which would seem to be a situation where a nurse would stop and observe and then raise the alarm if needed.
Also, not a behavioural expert by any stretch, but LL’s lack of reaction when Dr J walked in feels important. If someone was in the process of killing a baby and was then unexpectedly caught in the act, I think I’d expect them to overcompensate, “Dr J, come quick, something is wrong”, not just nonchalantly remark that the baby seems to have just started deteriorating.
I think this entire trial will hinge on the insulin cases.
JMO.
In some way, whistleblowing (esp in the care sector and from my experience with the nhs), it can be notoriously difficult to air a concern without being caught in some kind of vicious crossfire.Perhaps there was also (unintentional?) gaslighting of Dr J by the managers. He’s apparently raised concerns before now and they brushed them off. So in his mind, he might already be thinking that he is a bit crazy with his suspicions because he has essentially been told as much when he was dismissed by senior management.
I suppose it depends on how senior management was generally. If senior management had always in Dr Jays experience acted reasonably, then it makes sense that he would follow their advice when they told him to drop it, because he has no reason to distrust them. But if senior management has generally been pretty poor, there is more of an argument that he should have pressed ahead with his concerns even when they were telling him to stop.
I see what you're getting at but this guy is a slightly famous TV doctor so certainly not apprehensive of bringing attention on himself.very very plain speak here - and mods pls delete if its not right - but as a British person of Indian /Asian origin myself - scary and difficult to speak out and accuse for anyone in this situation, but esp so as a non white person. I know that does not excuse a delay. and we still dont even know if LL is innocent or guilty anyway but just talking to possibly why he hesitated and made sure before speaking out . I might not be right at all.
<modsnip> if his acccount IS 100% true and accurate, what are your thoughts on the version of events he has put forward? I don't mean what do you think he should have done next in terms of reporting it. Dr J isn't on trial.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!
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?
Yes, that's come into evidence since I posted and caught up. So, not unlikely that the baby dislodged it herself? Yet he still questions LL actions and harboured "concerns" about her.Seems baby K wasn’t sedated at the time
Dr Jayaram is asked about the morphine infusion recorded, which appears on the notes above a note added, timed at 3.50am.
Dr Jayaram says, having seen the prescription chart, the morphine infusion would not have happened before the desaturation.
Mr Myers said Dr Jayaram had told police Child K had been sedated with morphine. Dr Jayaram said that was what he had believed at the time.
Dr Jayaram says Child K was not on a morphine infusion prior to the desaturation. "However", she was not a vigorous baby.
He says, in retrospect, he will accept the morphine was not running prior to the desaturation.
He says he is "surprised" it was not running sooner.
He says he believed, "in good faith", the morphine was running at the time.
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Recap: Lucy Letby trial, Tuesday, February 28
The trial of Lucy Letby, who denies murdering seven babies at the Countess of Chester Hospital neonatal unit and attempting to murder 10 more,…www.chesterstandard.co.uk
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