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'Can’t do anything': Brain-damaged man's decline after hospital's morphine overdose

Author
Tara Shaskey,
Publish Date
Sat, 16 Nov 2024, 3:12pm
Trevor Flood, pictured with his wife, Kylie Flood, suffered significant brain damage from a morphine overdose he was given while receiving cancer treatment.
Trevor Flood, pictured with his wife, Kylie Flood, suffered significant brain damage from a morphine overdose he was given while receiving cancer treatment.

'Can’t do anything': Brain-damaged man's decline after hospital's morphine overdose

Author
Tara Shaskey,
Publish Date
Sat, 16 Nov 2024, 3:12pm

A cancer patient who suffered irreversible brain damage after he was given an overdose of morphine while in hospital has continued to decline since the life-altering incident. 

鈥淗e can鈥檛 do anything. He can鈥檛 turn the TV on, change the channel, or use a telephone,鈥 Kylie Flood said of her husband Trevor Flood鈥檚 current condition. 

鈥淗e鈥檚 pretty much reliant on caregivers and myself, and our daughter.鈥 

It is a far cry from the man Kylie once knew. 

Before the accidental overdose in 2019 at Auckland City Hospital, Trevor, of Dargaville, was an active builder who loved fishing, motorbike riding, and socialising. 

鈥淣ow he does nothing all day. Just sits there and watches TV,鈥 Kylie told 九一星空无限 this week. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 almost like a dementia. He forgets things and he鈥檒l ask the same question 100 times a day.鈥 

While Trevor, now 61, has beaten the throat cancer he had been battling, his cognitive health has deteriorated in the past five years since the brain injury. 

Kylie said it would get to a point where he would need to move to a rest home. 

鈥淚 feel sorry for Trevor ... and I feel sorry for our daughter, who has missed out on these years with her dad.鈥 

Kylie spoke to 九一星空无限 after a decision released by the Human Rights Review Tribunal (HRRT) affirming that Health New Zealand Te Whatu Ora had breached Trevor鈥檚 rights as a patient. 

The matter had been referred to the HRRT by the director of proceedings after the Health and Disability Commissioner (HDC) found system failures at the Auckland District Health Board (ADHB), now Te Whatu Ora Te Toka Tumai Auckland, contributed to the overdose of morphine and a lack of adequate monitoring of Trevor. 

The HDC was also critical of a nurse involved in his care. 

Te Whatu Ora Te Toka Tumai Auckland told 九一星空无限 it acknowledged and accepted the HRRT鈥檚 decision and said it was 鈥渄eeply sorry鈥 for 鈥渢he shortcomings鈥 in the care it provided Trevor. 

While the HRRT鈥檚 recent decision does not change anything for the family, Kylie said it has provided them with closure. 

The incident occurred at Auckland City Hospital. Photo / Jason OxenhamThe incident occurred at Auckland City Hospital. Photo / Jason Oxenham 

鈥淚t鈥檚 making them more accountable for what they鈥檝e done but it doesn鈥檛 mean anything different for us as such. I guess it鈥檚 just closing a chapter. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 all done and dusted [the complaints process] and it鈥檚 just a matter of getting on with everything.鈥 

The HRRT has the authority to declare that a health provider has breached the Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers鈥 Rights (the code), which it has done in Trevor鈥檚 case. 

In some cases, it can also order the health provider to stop engaging in the conduct that was part of the claim and make orders relating to compensation. 

The Floods, who receive ACC, were not awarded compensation by the HRRT nor were they seeking it. 

鈥淲hen I first complained to the HDC it was not for monetary reasons, it was more just getting accountability for what happened to Trevor.鈥 

Kylie said she was angry after the incident but has now moved past that. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 our lives now and we can鈥檛 live in the past,鈥 she said. 

鈥淲e have to keep focusing on what the future holds and keep moving forward.鈥 

A code red 

Trevor was admitted to Auckland City Hospital鈥檚 oncology ward in February 2019 for pain and dehydration management after a course of radiation therapy for throat cancer. 

He was initially prescribed oral morphine to reduce his pain but, as a result of his symptoms, he was unable to tolerate oral medication. 

He was instead given morphine through a syringe driver, a pump that provides continuous delivery of medication. 

The morphine infusion needed to be done with constant monitoring of vital signs, including four-hourly checks of the injections to avoid overdosing. 

Two days later, the hospital was understaffed and a resource nurse, a nurse who works on different wards when a ward is short-staffed, was called in to work the night shift. 

She told the HDC she checked on Trevor at midnight and noted he was asleep and breathing normally but did not take his vital signs. 

The nurse checked on him again at 2am, documenting his vital signs, and then performed hourly checks but did not take his vital signs. 

She told the HDC that when she saw Trevor at midnight, she checked the pump, which was working, but did not do the full required check due to being busy with other patients. She then checked it at 1.30am and 6am and documented this. 

At 6.55am, the nurse noticed he was snoring loudly. She was concerned and left the room to check with the day shift and alert the charge nurse, who called a code red and stopped the syringe driver. 

Trevor had low blood oxygen levels and was not responsive. He was moved to the intensive care unit (ICU) where he was treated for opioid narcosis. 

He was given another drug to reverse the effects of the morphine, which included respiratory depression. 

Trevor was discharged a week later but Kylie noted he began to show signs of confusion, reduced co-ordination and altered speech. 

The morphine overdose was later found to have caused him irreversible brain damage, with resting tremors, increased muscle rigidity and limb weakness. 

Inadequate care 

A few months later, Kylie complained to the HDC. 

In February last year, HDC deputy Dr Vanessa Caldwell found the ADHB and the resource nurse had breached the HDC code by failing to provide Trevor with adequate care. 

Caldwell found the nurse did not complete all the needed vital checks during the night, contributing to his morphine overdose. 

She said the nurse also left Trevor to seek assistance instead of staying with him and undertaking an immediate assessment of his consciousness, breathing, and circulation, and raising the alarm. 

In the findings, health experts said there were systemic issues at the ADHB due to a lack of clear policies and guidelines, as well as a stretched workforce, with a ratio of one nurse per nine patients. 

Along with several recommendations, Caldwell told the nurse and Te Whatu Ora to formally apologise to Trevor and his family. 

Margaret Dotchin, acting group director of operations for Te Toka Tumai Auckland, told 九一星空无限 that Health NZ has formally apologised to Trevor. 

鈥淲e continue to recognise the deep and lasting impact our care has had on him and his family,鈥 she said. 

鈥淚n 2023, we accepted the Deputy Health and Disability Commissioner鈥檚 findings of breach of the HDC Code and the associated recommendations, all of which have been actioned.鈥 

Dotchin said several other changes had also been made including improved support for nurses, how opioid medications are delivered to non-palliative patients receiving radiotherapy, and training and guidance. 

鈥淲e want to reassure the public that we are confident the changes we have made will reduce the chances of an incident like this occurring again.鈥 

A friend of the Floods has set up a Givealittle page to help them with ongoing costs related to Trevor鈥檚 care. 

Tara Shaskey joined 九一星空无限 in 2022 as a news director and Open Justice reporter. She has been a reporter since 2014 and previously worked at Stuff covering crime and justice, arts and entertainment, and M膩ori issues. 

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