Woman bled to death
Friday 4th April 2003
A young woman died after refusing a vital blood transfusion
through religious beliefs days after giving birth at Whipps Cross
Hospital.
Patience Edema, a Jehovah's Witness, 24, died three days after
giving birth to her second daughter, on Tuesday, October 24 last
year, from complications after an emergency hysterectomy an operation
to remove the womb.
At an inquest into her death at Walthamstow Coroner's Court, coroner
Elizabeth Stearns said Mrs Edema, of Grange Park Road, Leyton, died
from "post-operative complications for which she refused medical
intervention, namely, a blood transfusion."
Mrs Edema, who was seven and a half months pregnant and had suffered
two previous miscarriages in her home country of Nigeria, arrived
at Whipps Cross for a routine appointment with her husband Omatseye
on Friday, October 17.
After a four hour wait they were seen at midnight by a doctor who
said she would have to be admitted because of rising blood pressure
and possible pre-eclampsia.
Mrs Edema gave birth to her baby daughter through an emergency
caesarean section on Monday, October 21 after doctors become concerned
with her rising blood pressure, and had diagnosed her with pre-eclampsia.
They were also worried about the small size of the baby in the womb.
There were no complications with the caesarean section, which undoubtedly
saved the baby's life, and mother and baby were doing fine under
the close observation of hospital staff.
Early on Tuesday morning, Mrs Edema started to show signs that
she was not well. The doctors noticed she had not passed urine,
a fact her husband had pointed out six hours after she had delivered
the baby.
Doctors became concerned that her face, feet and hands had started
to swell and phoned her husband to alert him that she could be bleeding
internally.
Before the emergency hysterectomy was carried out, the couple were
advised by doctors that a blood transfusion would be necessary and
could make the difference between life and death.
However, they both said no and a form was filled out to say no
blood products were to be used during treatment because of their
religious faith.
After the surgery Mrs Edema was placed on a dialysis and a life
support machine in the intensive care unit, where she died on the
Thursday at 12.40am.
In a statement recalling the events that led up to his wife's death,
Mr Edema said: "I am now left alone on a strange terrain to
cater for my two daughters as a single parent. All my wife's ambitions
and inspirations have been nipped in the bud. Can my life be the
same again?"
Source

|