A baby died in a hospital four days after his mum took an abortion pill when she was 30 weeks pregnant.
The mum, who believed her baby, named Ronnie, was just 12 weeks old, took the medicine to terminate her pregnancy before going to the toilet where the tragedy unfolded.
This week an inquest was told how the mum had decided to legally abort her baby on health grounds believing she was 12 weeks gone, when in fact she was 30 weeks.
She undertook the procedure at York Hospital on October 26 last year, however, baby scans were either not carried out or were done erroneously.
The grim evidence was heard during the inquest on Monday into the baby’s death but family were present and all the evidence heard was in written form.
The shocked mum gave birth to the baby in a toilet at York Hospital after taking the drug mifepristone. Staff realised the baby was alive and immediately began to resuscitate him, according to Hull Live.
Named Ronnie by his parents, the baby was rushed to the Jessop Wing maternity unit in Sheffield where desperate attempts were made to save him. He had suffered a number of problems, including multiple organ failure, and was seriously unwell.
Ronnie was placed on a ventilator and received maximum life support care. Despite battling for four days, Ronnie sadly died four days later on October 30.
A serious incident investigation was carried out by independent medical practitioner Jacqui Evans. She found the “volume of patients had severely increased” which “increased the time taken to assess patients”.
“She said there has been an “information overload” and staff had “too much to do”. She also raised concerns about the communication between staff due to the “severe internal pressure”.
She concluded that had the patient been referred earlier, it is likely the advanced pregnancy would have been identified, Ms Evans said. She said the baby would then have been born in a suitable department and in an appropriate manner.
While Ronnie was born prematurely, in normal circumstances a baby born at 31 weeks would have a 95 per cent chance of survival. Senior coroner Professor Paul Marks praised the staff who acted quickly to try and save Ronnie.
He said they should be “commended for this. That had the true length of pregnancy been identified correctly and if the baby had been born in an appropriate setting he would probably have survived.”
Prof Marks delivered a narrative conclusion into Ronnie’s death. He said: “Ronnie was born alive on October 26, 2021, after a legal termination of pregnancy by the internal use of drug mifepristone.
“He was deemed as being viable and was resuscitated and then treated at the Jessop Wing in Sheffield. Despite this, his condition deteriorated relentlessly.”
The conclusion confirmed Ronnie died at the Jessop Wing, predominantly due to brain damage.
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