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When asked who harmed the triplet, you might think she would answer ' no one! He was ill!' rather than ' it wasn't me'.First of three triplets 'killed' by nurse Lucy Letby was murdered with injection of air into his bloodstream, medical expert says
- Dewi Evans says there is no evidence that Baby O's death was accidental
- The leading paediatrician thought the case mirrored that of Baby B
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Baby killed with injection of air by nurse Letby, medical expert says
Dewi Evans, a leading paediatrician called in by the prosecution, said he could see no evidence that the collapse of Baby O could have been accidental.www.dailymail.co.uk
In the aftermath of O's death on the neonatal unit it was discovered that he had suffered a bleed to his liver.
Dr Evans told the jury at Manchester Crown Court he believed the infant's fatal collapse had been caused by the bleeding.
'There is no other reason why this baby could have collapsed, and not only collapsed but where resuscitation was unsuccessful. My feeling was that what came first was the liver haematoma, the liver trauma.
We've heard from the local medical team about the resuscitation they carried out, but the chest compressions didn't get near the liver'.
The paediatrician thought the case mirrored that of Baby B, one of a set of twins, who survived what the prosecution allege was similarly injected with air.
'This was repeating the pattern I'd seen in the second case,' he said. 'It seemed to me that O had been given an injection of air…and I think the injection of air will have caused the final collapse'.
Asked for his own view, he replied: 'My opinion was that his terminal collapse was consistent with him being the victim of an air embolus. I couldn't see any evidence that this could have been caused accidentally'.
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Lucy Letby trial: Nurse tried to murder baby a day after doctor asked for her to be removed from duties, court hears — Sky News
A nurse tried to murder a baby just a day after a hospital executive refused to remove her from her duties despite staff concerns, a court has heard.t.co
Dr Evans rejected an allegation by Ben Myers KC, defending, that his view amounted to simply 'coming up with a mechanism to support this allegation'.
Dr Sandie Bohin, the second paediatric expert brought in by Cheshire Police, also attributed the baby's death to an air embolus. She believed the air had been introduced via a nasogastric tube.
Cross-examined by Mr Myers about the discoloration seen on Baby O's abdomen, she said such markings had been seen in other cases in the trial.
She added: 'Certainly the medical and nursing personnel are sure they've not seen them before or since, but have said that they were graphic'.
She believed that in Baby O's case air could have been placed into his nasogastric tube at the time of a feed.
When interviewed about the alleged murder Letby told detectives that mottled skin was seen regularly in neonates, though not 'to this extent'.
She said she remembered the infant's abdomen repeatedly swelling up. His death was 'unexpected: and it had left her feeling 'shocked and upset'.
Letby agreed she had been caring for Baby O alone at the time a registrar – the one she was frequently messaging on Facebook at the time – had gone to speak to his parents.
When asked who had harmed the baby, she replied: 'It wasn't me'.
She recalled messaging a nursing colleague to suggest a cause of death as sepsis or NEC, a serious inflammation of the gut. She thought that at the time because 'it was a discussion they had all had' on the unit.
Was she trying to imply that Dr Choc hurt the baby????