
Warwick Davis's wife Samantha died hours before she was due to be discharged from hospital, inquest hears
Actress Samantha Davis, the wife of Warwick Davis, died after suffering a cardiac arrest hours before she was due to be discharged from hospital, an inquest has found.
Mrs Davis, 53, died at London's University College Hospital on 24 March last year.
She had been admitted six and a half weeks earlier, after a disc prolapse caused a sudden loss of mobility in her lower limbs.
She then underwent a thoracotomy operation - a surgical procedure where the chest wall is opened - on 20 February.
Following a second thoracotomy on 14 March, Mrs Davis's condition improved and the hospital was planning to discharge her, the inquest at Inner West London Coroner's Court heard.
However, she went into cardiac arrest at 11.25pm on 23 March, and was pronounced dead at 0.28am on 24 March, after a failed attempt to resuscitate her.
Senior coroner Professor Fiona Wilcox said she was satisfied the cause of death "should be arrhythmic cardiac arrest and complications following left thoracotomies".
Mrs Davis had achondroplasia, a bone growth disorder which results in dwarfism, "complicated by very severe spinal problems" requiring multiple surgeries from 2016, the coroner added.
The hospital delivered "nothing but excellent care" and all of Mrs Davis's "complications were appropriately managed", Prof Wilcox said.
"It is frankly heartbreaking that the surgery itself was successful only for complications to arise and to cause her death," she added.
David Lawrence, a cardiothoracic surgeon at University College London Hospitals, said Mrs Davis's condition had been "progressing well".
During her hospital stay, she had two surgical chest drains removed - the second on the day she suffered the cardiac arrest, he said.
"Very sadly, on the night this happened, the original plan had been that she would be discharged home the following day," he told the inquest.
"We had good evidence that this patient had a chest x-ray that was acceptable, very stable observations and this patient did not bleed during the day."
Mr Davis, known for his film roles in the Star Wars and Harry Potter series, dedicated his BAFTA film fellowship award to Mrs Davis during an emotional tribute at the ceremony in February.
The couple met on the set of 1988 film Willow. They married three years later and have two children.
They founded the charity Little People UK in 2012 to help individuals with dwarfism and their families.
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The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
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The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
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Although the action is set in the West Sussex commuter town of Crawley, the show's interior scenes are filmed in a defunct school on the outskirts of Liverpool, and the BBC's director of comedy Jon Petrie and two other senior producers have also made the long journey north-west to check in on one of their hottest properties. Britcom giant Simon Bird, AKA Will from The Inbetweeners – who wrote Sadler a letter asking if he could work on the series after falling in love with the pilot – is once again in the director's chair (in this case, one of the chintzy armchairs in the sisters' fictional living room). I watch Sadler and Davidson perform a two-hander, which differs markedly from that day's script; the pair alter and edit the words as they go along, sometimes for clarity, sometimes for extra laughs and sometimes just because someone forgot a couple of their lines. 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If series one was the long-awaited debut – into which Sadler could channel all the rich raw material she had accrued over her lifetime – series two is the difficult second album, requiring less literal truth and more imagination. Sadler initially didn't let herself think about a follow-up – it would have been 'too heartbreaking' if it hadn't been recommissioned ('Like: what do I do with all these thoughts?!'). The writing process was daunting and exhausting. 'I have gone loopy. Lizzie's had to do a lot of mental health work on me this year to keep me going,' says Sadler. 'A lot of phone calls, a lot of day trips, a lot of shopping,' nods Davidson. A breakthrough came when Sadler decided to turn up the intensity: the money aspect is 'more stressful, the house is more cramped – everybody's stuck'. Her north star was a determination 'to make everyone's lives worse'. 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If she had, she wouldn't have found much pushback. Such Brave Girls has achieved a rare feat: a not safe, not nice and genuinely boundary-pushing sitcom that hasn't caused any discernible upset. Which, for a criticism junkie like Sadler, might not be the news she was hoping for. Series two of Such Brave Girls airs on 3 July on BBC Three and iPlayer. The charity Mind is available on 0300 123 3393 and Childline on 0800 1111. In the US, call or text Mental Health America at 988 or chat In Australia, support is available at Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, Lifeline on 13 11 14, and at MensLine on 1300 789 978


Wales Online
3 hours ago
- Wales Online
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