
Family of teen who died after routine surgeries left with 'more questions than answers' after inquest
The family of a teenager who died suddenly and unexpectedly after routine surgical procedures at a children's hospital in Dublin four years ago claim they have been left with 'more questions than answers' following an inquest into his death.
A sitting of Dublin District Coroners Court heard doctors admit they remain baffled how Carlow student, Cillian Gorman, acquired what was described as a 'vanishingly rare' blood clotting condition in a sudden and catastrophic manner.
Advertisement
The 14-year-old from Tullow, Co Carlow, was admitted to Children's Health Ireland at Crumlin on March 14th, 2021, and underwent both an endoscopy on his upper and lower gastrointestinal tract and a liver biopsy the following day.
The student had the procedures as part of tests being conducted by doctors who suspected he might be developing inflammatory bowel disease.
The inquest on Tuesday heard his condition deteriorated and he became unresponsive a few hours later while he was recovering from the surgery, before he was confirmed to have suffered brain stem death on March 20th, 2021.
A large group of relatives and friends of Cillian's parents, Deirdre and Declan Gorman, burst into applause when the family's counsel, David Roberts BL, called for a verdict of death due to medical misadventure at the end of evidence from several medical witnesses.
Advertisement
Mr Roberts claimed Cillian was a healthy boy but had suffered a catastrophic event resulting in his death while under the care of the hospital.
He said Cillian's parents did not accept the medical evidence they had heard at the inquest.
However, counsel for CHI at Crumlin, Conor Halpin SC, claimed that a narrative verdict was the appropriate finding as there was no evidence linking the care provided by the hospital to the boy's death to support a finding of medical misadventure.
The coroner, Clare Keane, recorded the cause of death as a lack of oxygen to the brain due to acute intracranial bleeding secondary to thrombophilia – a condition which causes the blood to clot.
Advertisement
Dr Keane noted that significant factors in the background of the deceased's health were autoimmune hepatitis and inflammatory bowel disease.
However, the coroner stressed that they were not directly contributory to his death.
Dr Keane said she would record a narrative verdict to reflect the complexity of the case and how it had been impossible to establish what caused the blood clotting.
The inquest heard that specialist DNA testing had even been carried out but had proven inconclusive, while a pathologist who carried out a postmortem on the teenager's body remarked that the case was 'so rare, so unusual and so complicated.'
Advertisement
A consultant gastroenterologist and hepatologist at CHI at Crumlin, Emer Fitzpatrick, said a finding that Cillian had thrombotic microangiopathy (a rare but serious disease otherwise known as TMA which damages small blood vessels resulting in clots) was one they had never come across in Dublin before.
'I've never seen a child like that,' said Dr Fitzpatrick. She described TMA as 'vanishingly rare.'
A paediatric radiologist who carried out the liver biopsy, David Rea, said pre-surgery tests indicated the patient had a slightly elevated risk of bleeding, but it was deemed safe to proceed with the procedure.
Dr Rea said there were no concerns while Cillian was in the operating theatre, and he had remained in a stable condition.
Advertisement
The inquest heard that Cillian had been brought back to a recovery ward at 2.30pm.
Dr Fitzpatrick said she reviewed the patient at 6.15pm when he appeared in good form and smiling after having eaten a few slices of toast.
She pointed out that he was also under enhanced observation after a liver biopsy, but there were no concerns about any of his vital signs.
The inquest heard that Cillian subsequently complained of a headache and vomiting later that evening.
His mother raised the alarm when he suddenly became unresponsive after a few deep breaths at 8.40pm.
He was transferred to the hospital's intensive care unit, where it was found that he had massive internal pressure on his brain.
Doctors decided that a plan to transfer the patient to CHI at Temple Street could not go ahead as his condition was too unstable.
Evidence was heard that he remained comatose for the next few days until March 20th, 2021, when brain stem death was confirmed.
A consultant paediatrician, Michelle Dillon, gave evidence of how Cillian was treated at St Luke's Hospital in Kilkenny in June 2020 after he had been experiencing worsening dizziness.
The inquest heard that the patient, who also suffered some diarrhoea and weight loss, was diagnosed with anaemia for which he was prescribed iron.
However, Dr Dillon said she was also concerned that Cillian might be suffering from inflammatory bowel disease, and he was referred to CHI at Crumlin.
A neuropathologist, Michael Farrell, said a postmortem examination of the patient's brain found it was 'massively swollen' and there were multiple areas of bleeding within the brain, which he believed had occurred in a 'hyper-acute' manner.
However, Prof Farrell admitted he could not explain why it had happened.
A paediatric pathologist, Maureen O'Sullivan, who also carried out a postmortem on the body, said she had 'never seen anything like this before.'
Prof O'Sullivan said the most salient finding was in relation to 'very abnormal clotting' throughout the patient's blood vessels.
She said TMA was highly abnormal for patients who might have inflammatory bowel disease, but there were multiple sites of clotting in Cillian's organs, including his lung, liver and heart.
However, the pathologist acknowledged she had been unable to establish what had triggered such clotting.
Ireland
Funeral hears Leaving Cert student (18) who died i...
Read More
Addressing Cillian's parents at the conclusion of the inquest, Dr Keane observed that the loss of their son, the second oldest of four children, was 'unbearable' for his family.
The coroner expressed hope that the inquest had clarified some issues but said she also realised that 'you still may have more questions than answers.'
Speaking on behalf of Cillian's parents after the hearing, the family's solicitor, Simon McElwee, said they did not agree with the narrative verdict but accepted how the coroner had conducted the inquest.
'Cillian was a robust, normal child when he went into the hospital. He was dead when he came out. After hearing all the evidence of the doctors today, my clients learned nothing new and have more questions than answers. They have no trust in the CHI,' said Mr McElwee.

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


BreakingNews.ie
3 days ago
- BreakingNews.ie
CHI audit finds paediatric critical care units 'under strain'
An audit of the country's two paediatric critical care units, at Crumlin and Temple Street, has found that while they deliver high-quality care, the system is under strain. The number of children admitted to adult intensive care units doubled to 148 cases in 2023. Advertisement The National Office of Clinical Audit found high bed occupancy rates, that were above 95 per cent, and says more investment is needed. The Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill has said that one of her major concerns is how waiting lists are managed which was why she had called for an overall audit of how waiting lists are managed 'across the board in CHI'. Speaking on RTÉ radio's Morning Ireland, Ms Carroll MacNeill said that as Minister she needed to ensure that the public system was working in the most productive way 'during the public hours that consultants are paid to do public work in a public hospital. 'What's not acceptable and what the concern is here is that those procedures are not happening quickly enough or in a sufficiently efficient way and that they're becoming such long waiters that NTPF intervention is required. Advertisement 'So my underlying issue is, how are those lists being managed? So what I've done is, Bernard Gloster and I have decided to have an overall audit of how are these waiting lists managed generally across the board in CHI in every discipline to ensure that that's not being replicated.' Ms Carroll MacNeill urged concerned parents to 'just sit with me and sit with the NTPF for a number of days, for a week or 10 days to allow the NTPF to do their work". 'This is something where the NTPF absolutely need assurance that this is being done correctly but what they also need is to make sure that there is no mismanagement of lists such that a child is waiting so long that they are required to be on the NTPF list where there could have been an earlier surgical intervention. 'And that is the bigger issue here. That is the bigger issue and that is what raises such particular concerns around the issues in this report but it also raises the broader patient safety concerns and what we need to do is make sure that that is happening in the most productive way in the public system in every discipline.' Advertisement The Minister said that in addition to the audit there would be a change to a centralised referral mechanism which would mean that if a child was referred to a consultant surgeon, they would not be referred to an individual surgeon, but into a central referral mechanism. 'Which means that the hospital can assess who has the shortest list, who has capacity to do this, rather than being sort of assigned to or stuck with an individual, who then has the capacity to do things at whatever pace, and some of them are doing very efficiently, and others less so.' 'We need to make sure and the NTPF need to make sure, and I need to make sure, Bernard Gloucester needs to and the CHI need to make sure that there are no perverse practices or no perverse incentives from the way in which waiting lists are managed. 'So I would ask parents to just sit with me just for a week or 10 days to allow the NTPF to get these assurances and to do their work. The NTPF have already assured that existing surgery scheduled will not be impacted but our concern is we need to make sure that this isn't happening anywhere else in the system.' Advertisement Ms Carroll MacNeill acknowledged that the NTPF had only recently discovered that there had not been a referral to the National Patient Safety Office. 'Let's not underestimate the impact of that, nor was there a referral to the department or a notification to any of us. So that's not a satisfactory way of managing that, and I expect that to be very, very different. There is no CHI without the state. The state is the funder of all of these services, and people who work in CHI, both at executive level, but let me be very clear, consultants in CH , and everybody who is in CHI is a public servant, and it is important that they understand that.'


BreakingNews.ie
26-05-2025
- BreakingNews.ie
Reports consultant referred patients to private clinic should be ‘followed up'
Reports that an investigation found a consultant had breached guidelines by referring public patients to his own private clinic are 'very worrying' and need to be 'followed up', the Taoiseach has said. Micheál Martin said that Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill was 'strengthening' governance within Children's Health Ireland (CHI). Advertisement He was speaking after a report in the Sunday Times suggested that an internal investigation led by the CHI found that the consultant was paid thousands of euro through the state's National Treatment Purchase Fund. Speaking in Killarney on Monday, Mr Martin said: 'I read that report yesterday. 'I think it's very worrying, and I know that the Minister for Health is already working in terms of strengthening governance within CHI, and there are a number of appointments from the HSE board to the board of CHI. 'That needs to be followed up, that issue, in addition to the report that was published late last week in respect of the surgeries for dysplasia, where it transpired that quite a number of them, particularly in Temple Street and in Cappagh, did not meet the criteria that the author of the report had set as a reasonable criteria to justify surgical intervention. Advertisement 'I think these are very, very serious issues that we will continue to follow up on in respect of CHI more generally.' HSE chief Bernard Gloster has said the CHI being fully subsumed into the HSE was an option being considered amid concerns around clinical care and governance. Last week, an audit of the CHI identified that many children underwent 'unnecessary' hip surgeries in two Dublin hospitals. The clinical audit of dysplasia of the hips surgery in children found that a lower threshold for operations was used at CHI Temple Street Hospital and the National Orthopaedic Hospital Cappagh (NOHC) than the threshold used at CHI Crumlin. Advertisement The review found that in the period 2021 to 2023, almost 80 per cent of children operated on at the NOHC, and 60 per cent of those at Temple Street, did not meet the threshold for surgery. Mr Gloster said 2,259 children who underwent hip surgeries in the three hospitals (NOHC, CHI Temple Street and CHI Crumlin) from as far back as 2010 will now be subject to clinical reviews.


Belfast Telegraph
25-05-2025
- Belfast Telegraph
Gloster ‘shocked' by claims of consultant misuse of waiting list system
Bernard Gloster was responding to a report in the Sunday Times that a consultant breached HSE guidelines by referring patients he was seeing in his public practice to his weekend private clinics, rather than securing earlier treatment for them by referring them to HSE colleagues. The newspaper said the consultant was paid thousands of euros through the state's National Treatment Purchase Fund (NTPF), which pays private practices to treat patients on public waiting lists. According to the report, the details were uncovered by an internal investigation by Children's Health Ireland (CHI). Mr Gloster said if there was any evidence of misuse of public funds he would refer the matter to the gardai. The HSE chief executive said he had been unaware of the CHI internal investigation. 'The content of it is absolutely shocking,' he told RTE's This Week programme on Sunday. 'Secondly, I'm even more shocked because nobody has told me about it, and in the light of everything we were doing in the last number of months with CHI, I'm just quite shocked. 'And, in fairness to the new CEO (CHI chief executive Lucy Nugent), that's not her fault – I'm not sure how much she has been told. I did speak to her briefly today. 'I believe a number of the issues around culture and other stuff that went on there were addressed, because the report was about more than that. 'But I want to be very clear, I've asked for a copy of the report myself, I have said to the CEO of CHI that I expect her and her board – other than or save for highly personal information – that that report should be published in the public interest. 'And I have made it clear that I reserve my position based on what I see in that report as to whether or not further questions arise and if any question arises, can I assure you, of anything connected with, or near connected with, alleged people ingratiating themselves financially in the public health system, the first step I'll be taking is to refer that matter to the gardai.'