Man died after religious beliefs delayed vital op

by Elsewhere 4 Replies latest jw friends

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere
    Man died after religious beliefs delayed vital op

    By Charlie Stong

    A JEHOVAH'S Witness who went into hospital for a simple hip replacement operation died after developing a lethal deep vein thrombosis (DVT), an inquest has heard.

    Fifty-six-year-old Peter Lay, a retired window cleaner, was admitted to Whipps Cross University Hospital in October last year and underwent surgery which provided him with a new hip.

    Within a day of the operation, the ball and socket joint had come apart. Mr Lay, who lived in Manor Farm Drive, Chingford, was rushed back to theatre where doctors attempted to manipulate the joint back together.

    When the attempts failed, doctors decided they would have to operate once again and open the hip up.

    But, because of his religious beliefs which state that Jehovah's Witnesses cannot receive blood that has previously exited the body, doctors could not perform the operation immediately as Mr Lay's blood haemoglobin levels were dangerously low.

    Walthamstow Coroner's Court was told that doctors had no option but to allow nature to take its course and wait for one week while Mr Lay's haemoglobin levels increased back to a level where operating would be safe.

    In that time, Mr Lay contracted DVT after two blood clots, formed in his lower legs, travelled towards the heart. They eventually became lodged in a main heart artery which had fatal consequences when blood was no longer pumping from the heart to the lungs.

    He eventually died of a pulmonary embolism, a blockage of an artery by fat, air, tumour tissue or blood clot, on November 11.

    Coroner Dr Elizabeth Stearns described the sequence of events as a tragic vicious circle.

    She said: "Mr Lay needed the exercise in order to prevent such a condition, yet could not possibly carry out that exercise because of his hip."

    Giving evidence last Thursday, consultant orthopaedic surgeon Thomas McAuliffe said Mr Lay's blood haemoglobin levels had dropped to almost half that of the average man after blood loss in the first operation.

    Any further blood loss, without the chance of blood replacement, might well have led to Mr Lay's death.

    Pathologist Suhail Baithun, who described Mr Lay as obese, gave cause of death as being a pulmonary embolism due to DVT.

    Dr Stearns recorded a verdict of misadventure.

  • Carmel
    Carmel

    Dam! You can retire at 56 by cleaning windows? Oh, maybe that was with a W! I knew Microsoft had brits on the payroll but this guy must have been up with Bill Allen and the boys!

    carm

  • CeriseRose
    CeriseRose

    It's sad to hear stories that end that way. :(

    What is a 'verdict of misadventure?' I'm done a search and it seems that it's a term used in the UK, but I can't find a specific meaning...anyone from there care to 'splain it?

  • jgnat
    jgnat

    I think verdict of misadventure is a fancy way to say "oops".

  • Scully
    Scully

    A verdict of misadventure is just a fancy way of saying "$h!t happens". In this case $h!t was predictable and preventable, however the medical establishment had the constraints imposed upon them by the patient's religious beliefs and physicians were both ethically and duty bound to respect the patient's wishes.

    In a case like this, normally a person having this kind of surgery would need to have anticoagulants like Coumadin to prevent the formation of DVTs, however, knowing that another surgery was going to be required, and that too much anticoagulant could cause life-threatening haemorrhage during the second surgery, the doctors would be walking a tight-rope trying to achieve a proper balance to prevent clots from forming while not thinning the blood too much prior to surgery. Tough call.

    Love, Scully

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit