
Mum tells inquest boy, 3, did not get antibiotics soon enough
Boy did not get antibiotics soon enough - inquest
10 minutes ago
Share
Save
George Torr
BBC News, Derby
Reporting from Chesterfield Coroner's Court
Share
Save
Family Handout
Oscar Neillings was three-years-old when he died in 2023
The mother of a three-year-old boy who developed a strep A infection and later died said he was not given antibiotics soon enough before he developed sepsis, an inquest heard.
A jury at Chesterfield Coroner's Court heard Oscar Neillings was seen by two out-of-hours GPs in the days before he was admitted to hospital.
Oscar was transferred to Chesterfield Royal Hospital in an ambulance after another visit to a GP surgery but suffered a cardiac arrest in the evening of 8 November 2023 and died.
Oscar's mother Stephanie Neillings told the inquest: "[For medical professionals] not to recognise sepsis when I had it on my mind... but I thought I was being crazy."
Assistant coroner for Derby and Derbyshire Julie Mitchell instructed the jury to look into whether there were "missed opportunities to treat or escalate his care" and if "failures had any material bearing" in his death.
Oscar, who was described in court by his mother as an "early riser who would love to sing", said he had many friends and had "a confidence I wish I had".
"Oscar was so full of life and that's why it is hard to believe that he's gone," she said.
"The house is very quiet now, what I would give to hear his screams around the house."
The inquest heard Oscar had a chronic cough which would "fluctuate in severity" but it did not impact his day-to-day life and did not cause him breathing difficulty.
He was seen by a paediatric consultant at Chesterfield Royal Hospital to be put on a two-month trial to use a steroid inhaler on 17 October 2023.
Family Handout
Oscar's mother Stephanie Neillings said her son was "full of life"
The jury was then told Oscar developed a "minor cold" by the end of the month which did not seem to improve and became "tearful and whimpering".
Mrs Neillings said: "You know when your own child isn't themselves… he wasn't even paying attention to his iPad – he didn't have the energy... he just wasn't right."
She told the court Oscar was complaining of a sore throat and after a look at his tonsils, she said she saw a "white pustule" on his tonsils and requested another out-of-hours appointment with a GP.
He was seen by an out-of-hours GP at Ashgate Manor in Chesterfield on 5 November who told his parents Oscar had a "viral upper respiratory infection" and "did not consider he would deteriorate" as well as "no need for hospital escalation", Mrs Mitchell said.
The jury heard Oscar then began to complain of stomach pain and began vomiting. He also had "funny breathing" which the parents had not heard before.
After calling 111, Oscar was seen again at Ashgate Manor out-of-hours service.
Mrs Neillings said: "He was checked over by the doctor, I didn't think too much of it – it reassured us that he was going to be fine and that it was just a virus."
The jury was told strep A infection was not considered.
Family Handout
Oscar was taken to Chesterfield Royal Hospital in an ambulance on the morning of 8 November 2023
But the court heard Oscar continued to feel unwell and was unsettled in the night getting out of bed and kept sitting on the landing.
He was seen by GP the next morning where he was examined and had a nebuliser put on him. Mrs Neillings told the inquest Oscar said "help me" to the healthcare staff.
The boy was then sent to Chesterfield Royal Hospital in an ambulance on the morning of 8 November.
Oscar was seen by clinicians who found he had low oxygen levels and a poor respiratory rate. He had a chest X-ray which showed "significant right-sided consolidation" and was given intravenous fluid and steroids.
Mrs Neillings told the court doctors spoke about a chest infection and they were going to administer antibiotics.
Asked about Oscar's care in hospital, Mrs Neillings said: "It was so unorganised – I didn't know what was going on.
"There was a lack of communication between medical staff and us because I had absolutely no idea how poorly he was until right at the end."
Family Handout
The inquest was told Oscar died from 1A sepsis following bronchopneumonia and invasive strep A infection
Mrs Neillings said a matron came to check on Oscar later in the day and said he had deteriorated and paged for a doctor.
Oscar went into cardiac arrest and died just before 17:30 GMT.
The coroner told the jury Oscar died from 1A sepsis following bronchopneumonia and invasive strep A infection.
Mrs Neillings was asked by the coroner about her general concerns she had at Oscar's care from the out-of-hours appointments and in the hospital.
She said: "I am adamant I saw white pustules on his tonsils but she didn't – at that time if he had the antibiotics then potentially it wouldn't have ended up [in this situation] they would've been the same as they get for strep A.
"It's madness how he was sent home with a viral infection... it doesn't say what the doctor thought it could be... I find it really crazy we were sent away with a viral infection and to keep on the Calpol which wasn't working."
On his care in hospital, she added: "There was a lack of leadership, no-one took control throughout the day... the fact he didn't get the antibiotics when he needed them and they missed their timescales for that.
"We saw so many doctors that day and no one recognised sepsis.
"[For medical professionals] not to recognise sepsis when I had sepsis on my mind... but I thought I was being crazy."
The inquest, which is expected to last three weeks, continues.
Follow BBC Derby on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@bbc.co.uk or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE EXPOSED: How restaurants are lying to you about their hygiene ratings. STEVE BOGGAN'S investigation reveals the shocking truth about those green stickers - and exactly what the owners had to say when confronted
Are you from food hygiene? It was an odd question to be asked, but 46-year-old restaurateur Sameh Houeidi seemed anxious to know. I was looking at the official hygiene rating sticker on the window of his Lebanese restaurant near Aldgate in London.


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Starmer goes all in on NHS with PM set to hand health service £30bn spending boost at expense of other public services
Sir Keir Starmer will pump money into the NHS at the expense of other public services. The government is putting all its eggs in one basket as it lines up the Department for Health for a £30billion cash boost at next week's spending review. However, health chiefs have warned the prime minister's promise to 'turbocharge delivery' could lead to difficult compromises elsewhere in services from the police to councils. It comes after the party's unexpected victory in the Hamilton, Larkhall & Stonehouse by-election - though as the threat of Nigel Farage 's Reform UK still looms large. The Department for Health will be handed an increase of around £200billion to its budget by 2028 - a £17billion rise in real terms. Its day-to-day budget is set to increase by 2.8 per cent in real terms annually over the three-year spending review period. Sir Keir has also pledged to have 92 per cent of NHS patients treated within 18 weeks by the next election, a target that has remained unmet for a decade. Currently, under 60 per cent are seen within this time with waiting lists rising to 7.4million last month. There are even fears NHS bosses may not hit an interim goal of 65 per cent next year. Chancellor Rachel Reeves' prioritisation of health has forced cuts in other departments and prompted protestations from other cabinet members like Yvette Cooper, the home secretary and Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister and housing secretary. Both have warned Ms Reeves the cuts will put some of the government's crime and housing targets at risk amid 'robust negotiations'. But the chancellor has maintained 'not every department will get everything they want'. Overall, the health budget, which stood at £178billion as Labour took office, will exceed £230billion by the next election. The increase means health is set to account for 41 per cent of all day-to-day departmental spending - up from 39 per cent. Ben Zaranko, of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said Ms Reeves's cash boost was 'a serious, meaningful increase in health funding'. But Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, warned the funding increase 'is not going to enable us to achieve recovery and reform' without big changes to the way the health service treats patients. He said the government's plan to withhold the budget for infrastructure simultaneously would also make 'combining recovery and reform' impossible.


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Health Secretary to unveil 'death of the doctor's letter' in digital first switch to help slash NHS postage bills
Ministers will today announce the death of the doctor's letter in a bid to slash NHS postage bills. Health Secretary Wes Streeting will unveil plans to switch to a 'digital first' system, with almost all patient communications made via the NHS app. The move, agreed as part of next week's spending review, will mean most patients will no longer receive letters about appointments, check-ups and screening dates. People unable to use the app will be able to continue receiving a postal service, but only as a 'last resort'. The Department of Health said the move would lead to the NHS sending out 50 million fewer letters a year, saving £200 million on stamps and envelopes. However, critics warned it could disadvantage millions of older people who struggle with the latest technology. Dennis Reed, director of the Silver Voices campaign group, said the move would accelerate the trend towards digital communications that risks turning some older people into 'second class citizens' and could result in vulnerable patients missing appointments. Last night Mr Streeting insisted that 'modernising' communications would 'put power in the hands of patients'. 'People are living increasingly busy lives,' he said, 'and want to access information about their health at the touch of a button, rather than wait weeks for letters that often arrive too late. 'The NHS still spends hundreds of millions of pounds on stamps, printing, and envelopes. By modernising the health service, we can free up huge amounts of funding to reinvest in the frontline.' Health sources said Royal Mail had become so unreliable in parts of the country that some letters didn't arrive until after appointment dates or else people didn't open their post in time. Mr Reed told the Mail: 'Many older people do not have smartphones and many of those that do only use them for making calls. There are still a lot of people who do not know how to use apps or who physically cannot navigate them on a tiny screen. 'If you try to force them to use an app then people will miss messages and vital appointments.' Caroline Abrahams, director of Age Concern, said technology brought 'many potential benefits', but added: 'This is a big risk because millions [of older people] do not use computers at all, or only do so for limited purposes. 'If the NHS app is to become the default, then this major change must be accompanied by many more opportunities to help people of all ages to go online if they wish to do so.'