
Coroner warns people may not realise severity of burn injuries after death of Cavan farmer (79)
A coroner has warned that people may not realise the severity of burn injuries in some cases, after hearing about the death of an elderly Cavan man after a stick fell out of a wood-burning stove in his home.
Patrick Lynch (79), a retired farmer of Cormore, Arva, Co Cavan, died as a result of complications of burn injuries at St James's Hospital in Dublin on August 29th, 2023.
Advertisement
A sitting of Dublin District Coroner's Court heard a neighbour of Mr Lynch had discovered a smouldering stick in a smoke-filled room when he called to see the deceased around 1:15pm on August 26th, 2023.
Ciaran Ellis told an inquest into Mr Lynch's death that he rang an ambulance after discovering his neighbour lying crossways on a bed with his feet 'red with burns.'
Mr Ellis said a stick that seemed to have fallen out of a door at the front of the stove was still smouldering on the floor.
He recalled that the deceased's pyjamas and part of a chair were also burnt, although there was no evidence of a large fire of any type.
Advertisement
When asked how he felt, Mr Ellis said Mr Lynch had replied that he was not in any pain.
'He did not realise he was badly burnt,' said Mr Ellis.
He said the deceased only complained about feeling a little bit of pain a few hours later, just before an ambulance arrived at around 4:30pm.
The coroner, Cróna Gallagher, said some people with burn injuries did not appreciate the severity of their burns as they did not feel any pain because the injuries were so bad that nerve endings in their body had been damaged.
Advertisement
'People with less severe burn injuries may feel far worse pain,' said Dr Gallagher.
She observed that people with severe burn injuries might not seek the urgent treatment that they needed due to the misconception that the lack of pain indicated they were not badly hurt.
'It's a common issue that the part that is burnt can just look red, which means people think it might not be serious,' said Dr Gallagher.
In reply to questions from the coroner, Mr Ellis said he would check on his neighbour two to three times per day.
Advertisement
He explained the deceased had moved his bedroom downstairs to the living room a few years previously because of his mobility issues.
Mr Ellis also said his neighbour used the stove as his main source of heating and would be in the habit of packing it with wood.
The deceased's brother, Jimmy Lynch, who gave evidence of formally identifying his brother's body to gardaí at St James's Hospital, said his brother had lived alone for over 25 years.
While the deceased had a few health problems, including poor eyesight, Mr Lynch said his brother was able to manage, although he had not really left his house for a number of years.
Advertisement
Mr Lynch said he was never aware of any problem that his brother, who was a non-smoker, had with the stove.
Sergeant Cathal Buggy gave evidence of examining the scene of the fatal incident and being satisfied that there was nothing suspicious about what happened.
Sgt Buggy also confirmed that there was nothing defective with the stove.
In a written statement, a paramedic, Billy Bushnell, said the initial triaging from the call for assistance had assessed Mr Lynch as a 'low priority' case.
Mr Bushnell said the injured man was chatty and responsive to paramedics after the ambulance arrived at his house at 4:28pm.
He said Mr Lynch had some third-degree burns and massive blistering on his legs, although he had stated that the pain was 'not too bad.'
Mr Bushnell said he advised his controllers that the patient should be brought to St James's Hospital in Dublin, where the National Burns Unit is based, but was instructed to take him to Cavan General Hospital.
He said he phoned ahead to the hospital in Cavan to have a resus team on standby, but none was in place by the time they arrived.
The inquest heard Mr Lynch was transferred to St James's Hospital the following morning.
Medical records showed he suffered burns to approximately 30 per cent of his body, which mostly related to his lower limbs.
Doctors in St James's assessed him as requiring immediate surgery for full-thickness burns, as it was a life-threatening situation.
However, they subsequently assessed that he would not survive further surgery, and his treatment was switched to palliative care.
Dr Gallagher observed that it was not clear if it would have made any difference if Mr Lynch had received treatment sooner, although she believed it was 'unlikely".
The results of a postmortem showed he had died as a result of complications of burns from material from a wood-burning stove, with heart disease as a contributory factor.
Offering her sympathy to Mr Lynch's relatives, the coroner recorded a verdict of accidental death.
Hashtags

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


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
The Guardian view on fitness: evidence of the benefits of exercise keeps growing, but who is listening?
The role of exercise in promoting good general health, and helping to prevent heart disease, strokes and diabetes is well established. No wonder, then, that long‑distance running keeps growing in popularity. Popular tracks and parks have never been busier, with groups in stretchy Lycra and fitness trackers on their wrists. The internet is awash with exercise videos, while figures earlier this year showed that gym memberships have climbed to a record 11.5m. The 16.9% of people aged 16 or over in Britain who belong to a gym is one of the highest proportions in Europe. The older teenagers and young adults of generation Z are a key demographic behind this social trend. And recent news from the world's biggest cancer conference, in Chicago, shows how right they are to take the health benefits of fitness seriously. A landmark trial compared the outcomes of patients in several countries who were placed on a programme of structured exercise – assisted by a personal trainer – with those offered standard health advice. The results showing that exercise could be as effective as drugs, without the side-effects, in preventing the recurrence of colon cancer, were described by Prof Sir Stephen Powis, the national medical director of NHS England, as 'really exciting'. The expectation is that the study will influence treatment guidelines worldwide – including in the increasingly fitness-conscious UK. But there is another narrative about exercise in Britain that is hard to reconcile with the one above. This is that we are a chronically unwell, overweight and sedentary population, whose health problems are only partly linked to the Europe-wide demographic challenge of ageing. These difficulties are widely recognised to be psychological as well as physical, with particular concerns around the worsening mental health of children and young people, which is widely linked to the rise in smartphone use. Which of these accounts of British fitness habits is more accurate depends which segment of the population is being scrutinised. Government figures show that the age gap – with 16- to 24-year-olds the most physically active age group – is not the only one. There is also a significant socioeconomic disparity. Students and adults in managerial and professional jobs are much more likely to keep active than manual workers or people who are long-term unemployed. As with other indicators of health, such as weight or smoking, there is a clear correlation with income. Richer people with more education and higher social status are more likely to be well. Could gen Z buck this trend with its more general embrace of fitness, which some point out is far cheaper than pub-going? It is too soon to be sure. Some young people believe their gym-going habits are as much about economic insecurity and status anxiety as they are about commitment to health. But as ministers finalise their 10-year plan for the NHS, which is expected to place a strong emphasis on prevention, they have an opportunity to build on, and shape, the way that exercise is offered and experienced. That being physically active is good for you is reinforced by the latest cancer study. But a preoccupation with personal appearance can be debilitating. A public health approach to exercise should seek to maximise the gains and minimise the harms associated with fitness culture.


The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Thousands harmed and 87 dead after NHS equipment failures in England
Almost 100 people have died and 4,000 have been harmed after equipment malfunctions in the NHS in the past three years, prompting calls for more government funding to upgrade broken and obsolete medical devices. A defibrillator advising paramedics not to administer a shock, an emergency alarm system on a neonatal ward failing, and the camera on an intubation device going dark were just three failures after which patients died. They are included in figures released for the first time by NHS England that show patients were harmed after 3,915 equipment malfunction incidents – with 87 being followed by a death – since 2022. Paul Whiteing, the chief executive of Action against Medical Accidents, said: 'These are shocking statistics. Behind these numbers are real people who are needlessly harmed, the impact of which will be life-changing and traumatic. 'The scale of the harm and loss of life that has resulted from basic equipment failures and malfunctions shows in stark relief the scale of the tragedy that has resulted from years of underfunding in the NHS.' The Labour party has pledged to double the number of scanners in English hospitals over the course of the parliament, and the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is expected to announce significant additional capital funding for the NHS in this week's spending review. The vast majority of incidents, which were logged by doctors and nurses when a device was broken, not fit for use or didn't perform as expected, caused a low level of harm. That meant patients were unlikely to need further treatment beyond dressing changes or short courses of oral medicine. There were 522 moderate harm incidents, in which a patient's independence could be limited for up to six months. Meanwhile, on top of the 87 deaths, 68 patients were severely harmed – meaning they could have received permanent damage from the incident, or had a reduced life expectancy. The most up-to-date numbers are likely to be even higher, as the new safety system has only been mandatory for NHS organisations since September 2023, and many incidents on the system currently are missing information on the harm caused. A defibrillator malfunction was the most likely incident to be followed by a death – with 28 recorded. Problems with breathing equipment and tubing failing to perform as expected also led to 12 deaths and 12 patients being severely harmed. Defective beds, mattresses or side rails caused 40 moderate injuries, and at least one fatality when a palliative care patient slipped on to the floor and died. Matthew Taylor, the chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said: 'Modern, up-to-date equipment such as scanners, defibrillators and patient monitors are absolutely essential for hospitals to run safely and more productively. But due to more than a decade of being starved of capital investment, NHS staff have been left with no option but to extend the life of obsolete equipment, which, as this research shows, is putting patients at unnecessary risk and leading to tragic avoidable harm. 'While the additional investment the government has pledged has been a welcome start, without sufficient capital funding it will be hard for the NHS to maintain the standards patients rightly expect and to deliver the government's 'plan for change' promise to cut waiting times.' A separate Guardian analysis of hospital board papers detailed how patients around the country continue to be put at risk by faulty or out-of-date equipment. Ashford and St Peter's hospitals trust in Surrey recorded an 'extreme' risk in April due to failure to maintain the physical environment and update equipment. At Croydon health services NHS trust, board papers from March detailed how radiology CT scanning equipment breakdowns were severely affecting cancer diagnosis and treatment. An emergency intercom in the main operating theatres was also broken, with a business case being written for a replacement costing about £60,000. Board papers from Barts health trust in London recorded a risk of cancellation or clinically significant delays to heart, lung, kidney and stem cell transplant due to ageing diagnostic equipment in March. At Royal London and Mile End hospitals (also part of Barts), staff were left unable to use some brain scanning equipment – still running on Windows 7 – because doing so would be a cybersecurity risk. At Whipps Cross in London, staff reported delays in care and possible harm to babies due to the age and state of repair of the fleet of ventilators in the neonatal unit. At least 10,000 diagnostic devices from just one of the NHS's major suppliers were past their manufacturer recommended lifespan at the end of March 2024, and at least 4,000 were a decade old. This finding – obtained via a freedom of information request from a prototype of an NHS database due to be launched next year and independently verified by the Guardian – relates to just one of hundreds of manufacturers, meaning the true scale of the issue is likely to be larger. Health service guidance has said trusts ought to have been working towards fully eliminating the backlog of diagnostic equipment over 10 years old by April this year. The figures come after years of underinvestment in NHS infrastructure, with both buildings and equipment in urgent need of repairs. The repair bill faced by the health service to make its estate fit for purpose more than trebled from £4.5bn in 2012-13 to £13.8bn in 2023-24. At least £2.7bn of those repairs are classed as 'high-risk' because they pose a danger to people. Last autumn, the new Labour government increased the NHS capital budget by £3.1bn overall, for this year and next. The NHS Confederation has called for the chancellor to commit to at least an extra £3.3bn of capital funding each year at next week's spending review, as well as greenlighting a new and improved model of private investment into the health service which 'learns the lessons' from PFI (the private finance initiative). An NHS spokesperson said it had recently introduced a safety framework and was increasing investment in replacement machines, having invested more than £245m since 2020 in new diagnostic equipment. They said: 'NHS staff work extremely hard to keep patients safe, but we know there is more to do to provide the best possible care.' A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: 'Patient safety is paramount, and we are taking urgent action to repair and rebuild our hospital estate. 'The NHS buildings and equipment we inherited were left to crumble following years of damage and neglect, but we are determined to turn this around through our plan for change. 'We will increase capital spending by £1.8bn to £13.6bn in the next year, representing the highest real-terms capital budget for the department since before 2010, excluding the pandemic.'


The Independent
3 hours ago
- The Independent
The drink that's linked to higher rates of diabetes than candy bars
A study by Brigham Young University and German institutions indicates that drinking sugary beverages, like soda, may be more harmful for your health than eating sugary foods. The research found a consistent link between drinking sugar and a higher risk of type 2 diabetes, with each additional 12-ounce serving of soda or sugary drinks increasing the risk by 25%. The lead author, Karen Della Corte, suggests that liquid sugars overwhelm and disrupt liver metabolism due to their isolated nature, leading to increased liver fat and insulin resistance. Unlike sugary drinks, dietary sugars found in nutrient-rich foods like fruits and whole grains do not cause metabolic overload due to the presence of fiber, fats, and other beneficial nutrients. The study suggests that dietary guidelines should differentiate between sugar sources, with more stringent recommendations for liquid sugars found in sugar-sweetened beverages and fruit juice.