logo
Man sent home without doctors checking for potentially fatal condition

Man sent home without doctors checking for potentially fatal condition

RNZ News21-07-2025
The junior surgical registrar who assessed the man who came to hospital with signs of internal bleeding was not aware they needed to investigate the possibility of an aorto-enteric fistula, the commissioner said.
Photo:
123RF
A man was sent home from hospital without doctors checking for a potentially fatal condition due to a communication breakdown, the Health and Disability Commissioner has found.
The man died the following day of unrelated causes.
The man, aged in his 60s, had undergone major surgery on his abdominal aorta - the main artery from the heart - two years before going to hospital in Health NZ's Southern region in 2019 with signs of internal bleeding.
In findings released on Monday, the commissioner said the junior surgical registrar who assessed him was not aware they needed to investigate the possibility of an aorto-enteric fistula (AEF) - a serious and sometimes fatal complication after that type of surgery.
Commissioner Morag McDowell said the doctor did not consult a senior vascular surgeon for advice.
Later, the doctor told other medics there was "no evidence of aortic pathology", which a gastroenterologist mistakenly took to mean the condition had been ruled out.
The gastroenterologist did not verify that against the man's medical records before discharging him, the commissioner said.
The man died at home the following day.
His son complained his father was discharged when still unwell with unidentified internal bleeding.
While the cause of death was unrelated to an AEF, the commissioner said Health NZ Southern had failed to provide services with reasonable care and skill.
"Given that an AEF is a life-threatening diagnosis that needs to be investigated urgently, there was a concerning lack of responsibility taken by anyone to ensure that this had been done," she said.
"Staff failed to communicate effectively, deferred to others, and passed on the responsibility without using critical thinking or making individual assessments."
McDowell said she accepted the junior surgical registrar would not have known about the possibility of an AEF.
But it was concerning he documented "no evidence of aortic pathology" - mistakenly leading others to false conclusions - without seeking advice from a vascular surgeon, she said.
Overall, McDowell found the doctor was not in breach of the Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers' Rights, but had reflected on these events and made changes to the way he documented in clinical notes.
Hearing about the case had affected the junior surgical registrar deeply, McDowell said.
"He has spent considerable time reflecting on the events. He believes that he practises very differently now," she said.
The gastroenterologist "should have confirmed, by review of the clinical record, that the appropriate investigations had been completed", McDowell said.
"I am critical of his lack of critical thinking and diligence."
He had also "reflected on how he accepts information from other providers", she said.
"I consider this to be appropriate and to serve to minimise the risk of such an event happening in the future."
Health NZ Southern had updated its registrar orientation programme following the man's death to ensure on-call surgical registrars discussed any subspecialty questions with an appropriate specialist, McDowell said.
In her recommendations, she advised sharing the findings with staff as a "learning resource to highlight the importance of critical thinking at each stage of care".
She also recommended providing ongoing refresher training on AEF and outlining the expected process for identifying and ruling it out.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nurses to start local industrial action before strikes
Nurses to start local industrial action before strikes

RNZ News

time9 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Nurses to start local industrial action before strikes

Healthcare workers hold placards at a picket line in Wellington as nurses, midwives and healthcare assistants strike nationwide. Photo: RNZ/Samuel Rillstone Nurses begin the next round of their industrial action from Monday as they push for better staffing levels . Local action will include district nurses on Auckland's North Shore wearing T-shirts saying 'Not Enough Nurses' instead of uniforms. Nurses who work in the cardiothoracic and Vascular Intensive Care Units at Auckland City and Whangārei Hospital will refuse to shift to other wards to cover staff shortages. "The North Shore District Nursing Service is short of six staff," NZNO delegate and district nurse Lesley Pook said. "That leaves 26 nurses to provide crucial community-based nursing, such as complex wound care, intravenous medication management, cancer treatment support and palliative care. "Being short-staffed means we have to ration care. We can't see everyone when we need to and have to rush the appointments of those we can get to." The New Zealand Nurses Organisation (NZNO) says it follows the 24-hour nationwide strike by 36,000 Te What Ora nurses, midwives and healthcare workers at the end of last month . Last week, Health New Zealand was deeply concerned by the plans, which it said would cause the postponement of more than 2200 planned procedures, 3600 first specialist appointments and 8000 follow-up appointments. NZNO chief executive Paul Goulter said Te Whatu Ora members voted strongly to go on strike, after a solution could not be found through bargaining. A full strike is planned from 7am-11pm on Tuesday, 2 September and Thursday, 4 September. "I think it very clearly points to nurses being fed up with the government's inability to resource the system properly to ensure patient safety," Goulter said. Health NZ said it was happy to return to the bargaining table and was committed to finding a solution. "We want to do our very best for our nurses and we think we've put a very fair offer on the table," Health NZ chief executive Dale Bramley said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

'Silent crisis': Asian people missing out on mental health support
'Silent crisis': Asian people missing out on mental health support

RNZ News

time16 hours ago

  • RNZ News

'Silent crisis': Asian people missing out on mental health support

Asian Family Services commissioned the mental health and well-being report. Photo: 123RF Asian people in Christchurch are missing out on mental health support because of language and cultural barriers, as part of a "silent crisis" of worsening national statistics, community leaders say. A mental health and well-being report commissioned by Asian Family Services published in July found that 57 percent of respondents were at risk of depression , which was a 12 percent increase on the figure reported in 2021. Asian Family Services chief executive Kelly Feng said 69 percent of Korean respondents and 63 percent of Indians showed signs of depression, while life satisfaction among all Asians had fallen by 11 percent since 2021. "These findings point to a silent crisis," she said. "Asian communities are navigating mental health challenges, discrimination, disconnection, often without adequate support. We urgently need culturally responsive interventions in schools, workplaces and healthcare settings." Kelly Feng Photo: RNZ / Yiting Lin Asian Community Transformation Trust founder Allen Hou said people's struggles were compounded by a lack of bilingual mental health professionals in Christchurch. Canterbury's Asian population had grown by 30 percent since 2018, but support services lagged behind other regions, he said. "Even if people have that knowledge and want to access help, that's when they face the common challenges we know of language and culture - 'I can't speak my heart language to describe my issues and my emotions and therefore I can't engage and utilise this service fully'," he said. Hou estimated there were only a handful of mental health professionals in Christchurch who spoke Asian languages. "We're doing our best to advocate for the community about the needs and encourage them to consider that as a career path even for their children. We try to meet with counselling students who are Asians and just encourage them in this space," he said. Allen Hou from Asian Community Transformation Trust. Photo: RNZ / Anna Sargent Hou founded the Christchurch-based charitable trust in 2021. The group works with organisations, schools and GP practices to help bridge service gaps. "Since we started we heard continuously from organisations in Christchurch that service people, council and other spaces that they've never come across an organisation like us. It makes us think we're onto something that no-one has been trying to meet in Christchurch," Hou said. Hou said stigma and shame around poor mental health remained strong in some Asian cultures. While Christchurch recorded the highest life satisfaction of any city in the report, Feng said it also reported higher than average barriers to accessing mental health services, echoing Hou's experience on the ground. Feng said calls to Asian Family Services' Asian Helpline had tripled since Covid-19, rising from about 3000 annually to about 10,000. The organisation's report was based on an online survey of 1016 Asian adults in May, funded by the Ethnic Communities Development Fund, which is administered by the Ministry for Ethnic Communities. The report was the third of its kind, with earlier versions published in 2020 and 2021 . Feng said discrimination remained a significant problem, with more than one in five people experiencing race-based bias. "Only 56.5 percent Asians felt like they were accepted by the community. It's really challenging for people feeling like they are just not part of the society," she said. Hou, who immigrated from Taiwan to New Zealand aged 11 in 1998, said moving countries was often stressful. "At my age the main struggle was language, the sense of being able to make friends and understanding what was happening at schools. For my parents it's different things like medical systems, for example in Taiwan where we're from we just go to hospital, but in New Zealand you have to find a GP and everything goes from there," he said. University of Auckland social and community health senior lecturer Dr Vartika Sharma said 75 percent of ethnic minority communities in New Zealand were born overseas. "They might've come from countries where mental health is still quite stigmatised so they don't have the vocabulary to talk about mental health. That all becomes quite challenging in terms of acknowledging it's a problem in the first place," she said. Sharma said a lack of high-quality data on the mental health of Asian and Middle Eastern, Latin American, and African women and girls in New Zealand also made it harder to design effective services. "It's a point of worry because it's a population that's expected to grow, and we don't want them to be invisible," she said. Stats NZ projections show Asians will make up about 26 percent of New Zealand's population by 2043, up from 16 percent in 2018. If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Bowel screening uptake in Bay of Plenty appalling
Bowel screening uptake in Bay of Plenty appalling

NZ Herald

time2 days ago

  • NZ Herald

Bowel screening uptake in Bay of Plenty appalling

It is a similar story in the Lakes health district, covering Taupō and Rotorua, where 27,694 were sent between August 1, 2022, and May 26, 2025. Of those, only 15,039 were returned. These figures are alarming because New Zealand has one of the world's highest bowel cancer rates, and it is the second-highest cause of cancer. That means an average of about eight people a day are being told they have it. It's not just an older person's cancer either, because more than 350 people under 50 are diagnosed annually. Many people know someone who has survived bowel cancer or died from it, and much has been done over the past eight years to try to get in front of the problem. The National Bowel Screening Programme started in July 2017 and has been introduced by all the former 20 district health boards, with Bay of Plenty being the last. People are invited to join the programme at 60, and are then sent a free home-test kit every two years until the age of 74. The Government is lowering the eligibility age to 58 nationwide from March. It has, however, been criticised for axing plans to lower the age for Māori and Pacific people to 50. The national charity Bowel Cancer New Zealand wants the screening age lowered to match Australia, where it is 45. It is, understandably, unhappy with the Government's slow progress. The media and advertising also play important roles in raising awareness. There are countless news articles in the media, and the national bowel screening multimedia campaign launched in July 2022 encourages people to take part in screening, emphasising it is free, quick and simple, 'and you can do it at home'. The good news is that Health NZ credits the campaign with raising awareness. But perhaps among the most powerful weapons for raising awareness are the individual patient stories. Kiwis such as Tauranga survivor Rachael Ferguson, who was 32 when she was diagnosed with stage 4 bowel cancer in December 2020. She has been 'clear' since surgery in February 2021. Then there's Rotorua father Matthew Keogan, who was 49 when he was diagnosed in 2021. He was told to get his affairs in order and say goodbye to his family as he might live only another three to six months. He has made a miraculous recovery after chemotherapy and immunotherapy with pembrolizumab (Keytruda). Last month, Northland's Cheryl Waaka, a former Black Fern and mother of two teenagers, talked about facing her toughest opponent yet: stage 4 bowel cancer. There are plenty of other personal stories on Bowel Cancer NZ's website, each offering an insight into that person's journey, each offering hope and each helping drive a greater understanding. All these people are brave and inspirational. So, given there's been a national screening campaign, heightened awareness, personal stories, and a lowering of the screening age, a reasonable question remains: Why would people fail to do something simple that costs them nothing but could save their lives? Reasons could include fear, stigma and people simply not wanting to go through what they perceive as the unpleasant procedure of having to collect samples and send them off. However, it would be fair to say some people probably can't be bothered, are ignorant or believe it won't happen to them. Whatever the reasons, the Bay of Plenty and Lakes figures are appalling. As survivor Rachael Ferguson rightly says, there are 'so many people under the age of 60 that are screaming out to have those kits' that eligible people not returning them is simply 'wasted resources'. The Government needs to lower the screening age further. At the same time, everyone eligible needs to take up the offer. It could save their lives. Bowel Cancer NZ chief executive Peter Huskinson has the final word. 'That free test in your mailbox doesn't just detect cancer – it can stop it before it starts,' he says. 'Don't leave it in a drawer. Put it by the loo and get it done.' Wise words indeed. Sign up to the Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store