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Case ref:202009078
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Date:September 2022
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Body:Lanarkshire NHS Board
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Sector:Health
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Outcome:Not upheld, no recommendations
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Subject:Clinical treatment / diagnosis
Summary
C complained about the follow-up care provided to their late partner (A) who died around four months after suffering a heart attack. The board said that A was followed up by the cardiac rehabilitation service in line with established practice. We took independent advice from a consultant cardiologist (a specialist in diseases and abnormalities of the heart). We found that A's follow-up care was reasonable in the circumstances (of no face-to-face consultations due to the COVID-19 pandemic). We also found that it was reasonable for the board not to follow up on blood tests taken at A&E following A's attendance with chest pain. The board said that the test results showed no evidence of a new cardiac injury. We considered it reasonable to have excluded a new cardiac injury as the cause of A's chest pain, and we were not critical of the care provided. Therefore, we did not uphold these aspects of C's complaint.
C also complained about the conduct of a telephone consultation with a cardiac rehabilitation nurse. A called to report symptoms of breathlessness and C complained that the nurse diagnosed a chest infection and/or anxiety over the phone, and did not arrange for A to be seen. However, the nurse did not recall making such a diagnosis, and their recollection was that there was no apparent indication for A to be seen. We were unable to reconcile the differing recollections, and we considered that the actions of the nurse appear to have been consistent with reasonable practice. C was unhappy that the call was not documented. The board said that the call was not documented as A had been discharged from the cardiac nurse service, and in such circumstances patients are directed to their GP for any advice required. We noted that referral back to primary care for non-urgent symptoms is consistent with established good practice. We did not uphold this complaint.
Finally, C complained that A's post mortem described A as having severe heart disease, and they complained that they had been advised everything was fine following A's heart attack and stent insertion. We found that comparison between findings pre and post death, four months apart, is problematic and can be complicated by a number of factors. We noted that the disease seen at post mortem may not have been present four months earlier and we considered A's care was reasonable based on what was known at the time. We did not uphold this complaint.