Health

Pensioner died after 17-hour wait for ambulance

An 87-year-old man died of an apparent lung infection following a 17-hour ambulance wait and a further 13 hours outside A&E after breaking his pelvis.

William Owen, who also suffered from Alzheimer’s disease, was left confused, distressed and in urgent need of care after a fall outside of his home in Llandeilo, north Wales.

However, after being told the wait for an ambulance would be four to six hours, Mr Owen had to be carried to his home by his neighbours. In fact, it took 17 hours for first responders to arrive.

His wife, Miranda Owen, 78, said she called 999 “constantly” in hope of an earlier visit but one didn’t come until the next morning.

It comes as The Independent revealed 50,000 patients – one in eight – waited 12 hours between arriving at A&E and being admitted.

Mr Owen’s son, Ed Owen, 48, told The Independent that his father was confused and distressed by the “awful” situation but added that the 17-hour wait was not the worst of the horrifying ordeal.

Due to a bottleneck of ambulances waiting to off-load patients into minimally available A&E bed, Mr Owen was forced to wait another 13 hours in the back of the ambulance before he could be admitted and could only go into Glangwili hospital in Carmarthen for x-rays before heading back into the ambulance – taking his total wait to 30 hours before being seen.

Limited bed availability meant during the wait Mr Owen could only go into A&E for an X-ray before being returning to the ambulance to wait in temperatures as low as 6C.

Mr Owen’s family believes his extensive wait in the cold the day after the fall on 9 October may be responsible for the fatal lung infection he contracted.

“I was completely shocked,” Ed told The Independent. “To some extent, you have previous terrible waves which were understandable while the pandemic was on. For some time while he was admitted things were quite good.

He continued: “The experience in the ambulance was worse. It was not a good experience for him at all, he was cold and really confused because of his Alzheimer’s. At home it was a bit better because we could keep him warm and give him tea.

“The ambulance staff would turn on the engine if he got really cold so that would mean the heater came on.”

When Mr Owen was eventually seen, he was told he needed surgery almost an hour and a half away in Cardiff and had to be transferred where he underwent a successful operation a week later before the infection he contracted began to cause issues.

Ed said: “I don’t want to be critical of the care he received. Once he had a bed, and particularly in Cardiff, the care was excellent. They threw everything to work out what was happening, but it was by then already too late.

“It’s like a particular part of the NHS is completely broken. There is this ludicrous situation of long waits because there are no beds.

William Owen was a retired solicitor and coroner

“The doctor who did his operation was devastated because he was pleased it had gone so well, he was hoping it was going to be a success story – he was upset.”

Within a few days, Mr Owen passed away.

“My mother was devastated,” Ed said. “It was a very long marriage so it was difficult to have him gone from her life.”

“We don’t know but it seems likely he could have caught this in the ambulance while he was cold and uncomfortable in there.”

William Owen and his wife Miranda Owen

Xural.com

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