WARNING: This article references suicidal thoughts
The physical wounds healed years ago, but psychologically, she says they鈥檙e still fresh.
Katrina Connolly鈥檚 voice shakes when recounting what she鈥檚 been through over the past five years.
The Health and Disability Commissioner (HDC) found a doctor failed to provide services to Connolly with reasonable care and skill when he injured her while performing surgery after not reading her notes. Connolly believes he got off lightly because he was not named in the ruling, and she has been left struggling to cover the cost.
听鈥淭here were times where I just wanted to die, I鈥檝e thought about it often. And now I suffer.鈥
The Wellington woman, now 47, had a long history of pelvic pain, prolonged bleeding and uterine fibroids when she arrived at the lower North Island medical facility to have her uterus, cervix, ovaries and fallopian tubes removed on July 17, 2019.
The surgeon had operated on her before and was aware she had two ureters (the tube which carries urine from the kidney to the bladder).
While the doctor said in the HDC听听he did review her ultrasound images, the commissioner said he did not remember she had a second ureter and did not follow his usual practice of reading clinical notes before starting the surgery and as a result, the second ureter was injured.
听鈥淗e had had frequent contact with [Connolly] and felt fully updated on her condition at that time,鈥 the HDC said. 鈥淗e said that there had been a 鈥榩lethora of ongoing correspondence鈥.鈥
For months after the surgery, Connolly suffered and felt no one believed she was still in severe pain.
Katrina Connolly at her home in Johnsonville, Wellington. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Speaking through tears to the听Herald on Sunday,听she said she was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, which she believes stems from not being listened to.
鈥淭hey were putting it down to the hysterectomy, it got to the point where I had an emergency scan to see what was going on and then they found that he had damaged my ureter.鈥
In the听, deputy commissioner Deborah James found the surgeon had breached Right 4 (1) of the Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers鈥 Rights.
James said she considered it more likely than not that the injury to Connolly鈥檚 ureter was a result of the doctor鈥檚 failure to review the documentation to ensure that he had all the relevant information about her prior to performing the surgery.
听鈥淒r B [a pseudonym given to him by the commission] also acknowledged that it is possible that the injury could have been prevented if he had reviewed the documentation,鈥 she wrote.
Although she acknowledged the doctor had 鈥渆xcellent communication鈥 with Connolly in the lead-up to the surgery, she said his failure to familiarise himself with the notes immediately before it resulted in a lack of awareness of her two ureters and constituted a moderate departure from the accepted standard of care.
James recommended the doctor provide a formal written apology to Connolly and give evidence over a six-month period showing notes are reviewed prior to surgeries being performed.
A lawyer representing the man told the听Herald on Sunday听it would be 鈥渋nappropriate and unprofessional鈥 for him to comment, but he remained 鈥渄evastated鈥 by the error that occurred and the impact it had on Connolly.
He said听it was regrettable that Connolly was frustrated with the findings, but her concerns were subject to a comprehensive formal investigation.
鈥淸The doctor] fully engaged with the HDC investigation process, accepted the findings, and agreed to the HDC鈥檚 recommendations. Likewise, the matter was considered by the Medical Council of New Zealand.鈥
A spokesperson for the region鈥檚 district health board (DHB) said it accepted the findings.
They said the report found it was responsible for providing appropriate services and had not breached the code.
鈥淧atient safety and care quality remain paramount.鈥
While the case was closed last September, Connolly said she will feel the impact of Dr B鈥檚 actions for the rest of her life and went into debt because of her medical costs, and her legal bill for the private lawyer she hired for the case.
A driving factor in her wanting to tell her story now was another case recently published in the听, which detailed how a woman was left with a permanent colostomy bag after a specialist removed a 30cm cyst from her left ovary without consent and perforated her bowel in the process.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 even know how he sleeps at night, like I was offered to have a meeting with him in the DHB and I just didn鈥檛 want to because I don鈥檛 want to see his face.鈥
She said that in her opinion, 鈥渢here鈥檚 nothing that he鈥檚 offered to help or anything like that. He sent me a two-line apology that he wrote that the HDC asked him to. It鈥檚 like he doesn鈥檛 care. It鈥檚 insulting. Other women that go for surgeries should know what he鈥檚 done鈥.
Connolly underwent a lengthy procedure to correct the damage, leaving her with a 鈥渉uge scar鈥.
鈥淔rom there it took me a couple of years to heal from both surgeries. It just took away my life.鈥
Katrina Connolly had a nephrostomy tube inserted while she was hospitalised.
Still, the healing surgery didn鈥檛 stop the pain, Connolly said.
鈥淭he mental stuff is probably the worst, the anxiety and the panic that I get on a daily basis.
鈥淓very little thing in my body I freak out. So, it ruined me financially, it鈥檚 affected my loved ones, it鈥檚 broken my loved ones鈥 hearts. They can鈥檛 do anything and it鈥檚 just so wrong. Our whole system is so wrong.鈥
She said this also caused her to fear the Covid-19 vaccine, leading to a relationship breakdown with her workplace, as she felt unable to trust the medical system.
Filing the complaint against Dr B with the commission cost her financially in legal fees. She even launched a听recently to help with bills.
She said the trauma has permeated her relationships with others, who she says want to fix what happened to her but can鈥檛.
鈥淚 feel like my brain has been damaged from this, just a constant worry and fear of something wrong with me. It鈥檚 affected every part of my life.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 describe it. It鈥檚 like just talking about it, it鈥檚 like that adrenaline through your body where you feel like you鈥檙e reliving it.鈥
Katie Harris is an Auckland-based journalist who covers social issues including sexual assault, workplace misconduct, crime and justice. She joined the听Herald听in 2020.
SUICIDE AND DEPRESSION
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If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111
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