
Northern Beaches hospital agrees settlement after claims newborn left with lifelong disabilities
Court documents seen by Guardian Australia reveal the baby's mother presented to the hospital's birthing unit in 2022, complaining of lower abdominal pain on her right side. The woman – who cannot be named for legal reasons – says she was sent home without being given an ultrasound or undergoing any further investigation.
When she presented to the hospital again two days later with worse symptoms, an MRI revealed she had acute appendicitis. During surgery to remove the appendix, it was found to be perforated and had a gangrenous tip, with free pus also found in the woman's pelvis.
She was discharged from the hospital after three days without being provided with oral antibiotics, according to her claim. Also, she did not undergo CRP testing, which can detect signs of inflammation or infection, and was not assessed by the obstetrics and gynaecology registrar before her discharge.
Less than a week later she presented again at the hospital feeling feverish and experiencing pain in her right flank, and suffering from diarrhoea and nausea.
Sign up: AU Breaking News email
She was transferred to Royal North Shore hospital, where she was diagnosed with sepsis and chorioamnionitis, an infection of the placenta and the amniotic fluid, and underwent an emergency caesarean.
An amended statement of claim filed for the child on 20 June this year, with the mother acting in his place, alleged Northern Beaches hospital breached the duty of care it owed the child by failing to take 22 precautions.
Those included failing to diagnose the mother with appendicitis on the day she first presented to the hospital and failing to perform the surgery to remove the appendix immediately.
After the surgery, the precautions taken should have included performing blood tests, white blood cell count, CRP testing, an assessment by the surgical team, an ultrasound examination and an MRI investigation, the statement of claim alleged.
The documents alleged the mother should not have been discharged when she was, as the hospital should have considered her perforated appendix, its gangrenous tip and the free pus and checked her inflammatory markers.
She should also have been provided with antibiotics on discharge, the statement of claim alleged.
The hospital's failure to take those precautions caused or materially contributed to the child suffering injuries, including the consequences of being born significantly prematurely, and general bodily trauma and shock, the statement of claim alleged.
A statement of particulars filed on 24 May 2024 gave further details of the consequences of the alleged medical negligence on the part of the hospital.
The document outlined claims that the child had experienced 'continuing disabilities' and 'loss of enjoyment of life', including continuing restriction on the enjoyment of and participation in normal social and recreational activities such as socialising with friends and family, domestic activities and recreational travel.
The district court declined to allow access to the hospital's defence to the statement of claim.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
The statement calculated the expenses the family would have for medications and doctors' visits for the rest of the child's life.
The documents also alleged that the child had 'suffered a general diminishment in [his] ability to earn income and … is no longer able to compete evenly on the open labour market … in the future'.
On 31 July the parties agreed to settle the matter, with the Northern Beaches hospital to pay a sum without admission of liability. The family requested that the amount not be made public.
Northern Beaches is the only hospital in NSW where public services are provided by a private company, Healthscope, under a complex contract.
After years of mounting debt and a string of complaints about care standards – including the death of two-year-old Joe Massa and a woman whose baby died in childbirth because an emergency caesarean was offered too late – the hospital went into receivership in May. The NSW government is trying to buy it.
NSW Health referred a request for comment on the baby's case to Healthscope.
A Healthscope spokesperson said: 'We reached an amicable resolution with the family which was approved by the court. Out of respect for the family, we will not be providing further comment on this matter.
'While adverse incidents happen at all hospitals, the team at Northern Beaches hospital (NBH) has been subjected to intense scrutiny and speculation. The fact is the hospital treats over 80,000 patients every year and the vast majority receive outstanding care,' the spokesperson said.
'Indeed, the recently published Clinical Excellence Commission (CEC) report on Northern Beaches hospital noted that the hospital is 'staffed by a committed and professional workforce with a shared focus on delivering safe, high-quality care.' The CEC also found that the level of serious incidents at the NBH (Harm Score 1) is broadly comparable to its peer hospitals.'
Lawyers for the family said they declined to comment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
11 hours ago
- Sky News
Remaining hospitals in Gaza overwhelmed with malnutrition cases
In the Al-Rantisi hospital in Gaza City, nine-year-old Maryam Dawas is wasting away. WARNING: This shows people suffering from malnutrition which you may find distressing Her malnutrition is so severe, she can no longer eat. Her tiny ribcage juts out of her chest. Her upper arms are thinner than her wrists. Every blink looks like it's a struggle. Her eyes are tired and sad. "What is your dream now?" a family friend who's filming asks her. "To go back to the way I was," she whispers back. Maryam Dawas used to weigh 25kg (3st 9lb). Now she weighs nine (1st 4lb). That's about the weight of a baby that hasn't yet reached its first birthday. Her medical records say she has functional diarrhoea, unspecified intestinal malabsorption and unspecified severe protein-energy malnutrition. "Maryam suffered from malnutrition ever since we were displaced from the north to Rafah," her mother explains. "Because of the famine that was in the south, we went through a famine, but it wasn't worse than the one we are in now." Maryam's case is hardly unique. The latest report on Gaza from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says that almost 13,000 new admissions of children for acute malnutrition were recorded in July. The latest numbers from the Gaza Health Ministry are 251 dead as a result of famine and malnutrition, including 108 children. "I went to multiple hospitals in the last week and every one of them is overwhelmed with malnutrition cases, severe malnutrition - children, teenagers, you name it," OCHA Gaza representative Olga Cherevko tells me. "And whether it's a pre-existing condition or malnutrition on its own, the fact that it's in the state that it is means that it exacerbates whatever condition exists on top of it." Israel's coordinator of government activities in the territories (COGAT) claimed on Tuesday that Hamas was inflating the numbers of people in Gaza dying of malnutrition, and that most of the children who had died had pre-existing health conditions. But that is the thing about famine. It seeks out the vulnerable first and then it settles in, ingraining itself with the weak and the poverty-stricken, exacerbating their problems. In his book Poverty and Famines, the Nobel prize-winning economist Amartya Sen writes as his opening line: "Starvation is the characteristic of some people not having enough food to eat. It is not the characteristic of there not being enough food to eat." 3:08 Aid not getting to the most weak and vulnerable There is now a trickle of aid getting into Gaza, but it is getting to those who are strong enough to fight for it. Siphoned off from aid points and sold on the black market, it is getting to the few who still have some money to pay for it. It is not getting to the weak, the vulnerable and the poor, though that describes the majority of Gaza's 2.1 million residents. According to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (ICE) which measures food insecurity and famine, 81% of households in Gaza reported poor food consumption in July, up from 33% in April; 24% of households experienced very severe hunger in July, compared with 4% in April; and nearly nine out of 10 households resorted to "extremely severe coping mechanisms" to feed themselves. That huge hike in food insecurity follows on directly from Israel's total blockade, which began on 2 March and ended on 19 May when Israel began a limited resumption of food supplies. Eleven weeks in which nothing at all came in, compounding almost two years of war and a partial blockade of Gaza ongoing since 2007. The UK says it plans to evacuate more injured and critically ill children from Gaza "at pace". For children like Maryam, that could not happen soon enough.


Telegraph
13 hours ago
- Telegraph
TikTok natural contraception trend ‘fuelling unwanted pregnancies'
Birth control advice promoting natural contraception on TikTok is putting women at risk of unwanted pregnancies, a study has found. Researchers in Australia found more than half of content creators on the social media platform reviewed (53 per cent) rejected hormonal methods of contraception, while just over a third (34 per cent) expressed distrust in health professionals. The team analysed 100 TikTok videos on contraceptive health that had collectively gained nearly five billion views and 14.6 million likes. Fertility awareness and cycle tracking (38 per cent) and the Pill (35 per cent) were the most frequently discussed subjects, according to the findings published in the journal Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health. Dr Caroline de Moel-Mandel, the lead researcher from La Trobe University, said TikTok was a growing source of contraceptive information for young adults, but much of the content was 'unreliable' and of poor quality, putting pressure on young people to sort fact from fiction. She said: 'Many TikTok creators promoted natural contraceptive methods like fertility tracking without disclosing their limitations, which include accurately tracking hormone fluctuations, motivation and partner cooperation. 'Importantly, they failed to mention that these methods are generally ineffective when used on their own. 'This kind of misinformation, combined with a growing distrust in healthcare professionals can result in unsafe decisions and ultimately, unplanned pregnancies.' Most influencers aren't health professionals Only 10 per cent of the analysed videos were created by health professionals, while the rest featured first-hand experiences and beliefs from influencers and general uploaders, or advice from self-proclaimed 'hormonal health coaches' or wellness educators with significant reach. Megan Bugden, the study's co-author and lecturer in public health at La Trobe, said that while videos by health professionals gained on average more likes and followers, TikTok's algorithm amplified influencers' voices with greater reach over medical experts. She said: 'Social media is reshaping health care providers' relationships with patients. 'We encourage health professionals to rebuild trust through shared decision-making on contraceptive options, which may increase patient satisfaction and mitigate unreliable information posted online.' With TikTok's widespread reach, Ms Budgen said women's and public health organisations also have a 'significant' role to play in countering misinformation. She added: 'Young people deserve accurate information to make informed contraceptive health decisions, regardless of background or resources. 'Public health organisations should collaborate with social influencers to promote safe and effective contraceptive information through messages that resonate with younger audiences.'


The Guardian
13 hours ago
- The Guardian
This is how we do it: ‘Our lives are absorbed by raising kids, and we struggle to find time for sex'
Sex is still so important to me and I'm happier after – I'm just struggling to get in the mood We have two children under 10, and being a mother to them nearly always takes priority. I rarely have time to do the things that nourish and sustain me – go to the gym, wash my hair, see friends – and by the end of the day I'm too exhausted from mothering to have sex. But when I'm more relaxed and rested, and able to prioritise myself, I'm more in the mood. Scheduling also helps, so if we say, 'Let's have sex on Wednesday,' I go to bed earlier and make time for it. Rich is a great dad and does loads around the house, but I take on more of the mental load and have lost more of myself in parenthood. It's just the way it is. Rich and I met at college. When we reconnected in our 30s, I immediately knew I wanted to have sex with him. We went on a couple of dates and the sex was great; it felt natural, but also exciting and full of desire. We fitted together perfectly. I thought it was just a sexual thing at first, but the morning after the first time, I had this knowing feeling that it was going to last. After a difficult first birth, I couldn't physically have sex for nine months. I had scarring, didn't want anything near there and thought it was the ultimate turnoff. Rich was supportive and patient. We took it slowly, and when we eventually had sex again it felt like a huge relief. Sex is still so important to me, and I'm happier after. I'm just struggling to get in the mood, balancing being a mum with looking after myself and being a sexual being. We now have sex once every month or two, which isn't often enough for Rich. I've never had a high sex drive, and before we had kids we had sex about once a week, usually on a long, lazy Sunday morning. We're going through a tough time, and Rich isn't happy about a few things in our relationship, sex being one of them. I love him, so I'm trying to be more available, but I don't want to have sex out of duty. We're going to start marriage counselling, and I hope that this busy parent stage will pass, and our love, sexual chemistry and commitment will get us through. If you're keen to talk to us about your sex lives you can get in touch by filling in the form below. It is very important that both sexual partners are happy to participate. When Laura does initiate out of the blue, it feels reassuring. I'm careful not to reject her advances Laura and I are very compatible; we have shared values and similar temperaments. My previous relationships were more challenging, so I was surprised how easy it was with her. But once kids came along, that changed. Our lives are now completely absorbed by raising our kids, and we struggle to find time for each other. I was the one who pushed to have children; Laura took some convincing. When trying to conceive took a year, sex became less about pleasure and more of a chore. Then, when you have kids, there's less mystery, and having the same mundane, routine interactions doesn't help to create an erotic environment. Our sex life doesn't fulfil me the way it used to, and I've stopped initiating because it's hard to keep doing that and getting rejected. What we need is to have fun outside the home, get out and be ourselves in the world, and bring more joy and colour back into our lives. When Laura does initiate sex out of the blue, it feels reassuring. I'm careful not to reject her advances, even when I'm feeling a bit unwell, because I don't want months without sex to lead into more. We try to make time four to six times a year to enjoy and pleasure each other. It can be hard to get into the headspace, but we build up anticipation by talking about it, so half the work is already done before we've even taken off our clothes. As I get older, I am reminded that life is finite. I'd love to have the joy and possibility of being more sexual, to feel confident to initiate again, and even get that dynamic back from 10 years ago, when we had sex once a week. Just non-spectacular, comfort sex that says: 'I see you, I want to be with you, I love you.' Sex makes everything feel more positive, and life is a little easier.