Surgery


Your views so vital in fight for fair deal on transport Defiant Clarke speaks out again, at... 'Doctors failed to spot tumo

Posted in by admin on Sat, 2006-09-09 11:00

A GRIEVING mother has criticised a Yorkshire hospital where staff repeatedly failed to diagnose a brain tumour that killed her six-year-old son.

Vicky Ringer is furious that her son Levi's condition was not diagnosed until six weeks before he died and believes he would be alive today had the warning signs been spotted earlier.

The 34-year-old mother, from Wakefield, says she took her son to a consultant paediatrician five times complaining of headaches, but it was only when she demanded a brain scan that doctors realised he had a tumour.

Miss Ringer, a drama teacher, first took him to his paediatric consultant at Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield in January complaining that he was unwell.

But his condition failed to improve and in March Levi had such a bad headache that his mother rushed him to hospital, where he was kept overnight and then released with medication for migraines. Miss Ringer took her son to her GP with symptoms of dizziness and a sore neck but was told he was suffering from a stiff neck.

His condition failed to improve and he continued having severe headaches and he became withdrawn and unhappy, often waking in the night to be sick. She returned to the hospital in May and demanded a scan.

She insisted he have one sooner and he was finally given a CT scan on July 20 when hospital staff realised Levi had fluid in his brain that wasn't draining away.

"They sat me down and told me they suspected a brain tumour was blocking the fluid from draining out of Levi's brain. My whole world fell apart.

She plans to make a complaint about the hospital and GPs, saying: "They let my gorgeous little boy down. I don't want this to happen to anyone else.

The chief nurse for the Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust, Tracey McErlain-Burn, said: "We would like to express our sincere sympathy to the family of Levi, and our heart goes out to them at this very sad and difficult time.

"Due to patient confidentiality it is inappropriate to discuss details of our patients in public. However we have contacted the family and offered to meet with them to openly discuss all of their concerns."

control for popup window Other Sites in the JP Network. [Archive ] [Sitemap ] [Terms & Conditions ] All rights reserved 2006 Johnston Press Digital Publishing.

This is cache, read story here