An inquest found that doctors did not pass on her results to a surgical team – but instead discharged her despite later finding she had a small obstruction in her bowel.
The NHS staff failed to spot the red flag symptom of sepsis and have since apologized to the family – settling on an undisclosed sum.
Shirley’s daughter Dawn Hemingway pursued the negligence claim against Calderdale Royal Hospital – where she worked as a nurse herself for 36 years.
Dawn, 57, said: “Myself, the rest of our family and friends were all left devastated by losing mum.
“It is hard to read the Trust’s admissions without getting angry or frustrated by the fact they failed to provide mum with the correct care immediately.
“I worked in the National Health Service for over 36 years as a nurse at Calderdale Royal Hospital and during my career, my colleagues and I always had patient safety as the number one priority.
“The standard of care in the NHS has to be 100% at all times and sadly in my mum’s case, it fell well short. The system completely failed her.
“While nothing can bring my mum back, I am determined to ensure lessons are learned by the NHS to make sure that this kind of incident does not happen again.”
Shirley had visited her GP due to abdominal pain and vomiting as he noted she was pale and suspected that she was suffering from constipation.
When the medication he prescribed to her failed to improve her condition two days later she attended Calderdale Royal Hospital, in Halifax, West Yorks., on January 13.
She collapsed at home and a diagnosis of intra-abdominal sepsis was made at the hospital, but after suffering two cardiac arrests she died hours later on January 20.
An Inquest into Shirley’s death found that there was a clear history consistent with a small bowel obstruction with vomiting and constipation.
A medical expert at the hearing told the Coroner that Shirley should have been reviewed by the surgical team following the X-rays – rather than being discharged.
It was then up to Shirley’s hubby Peter Hemingway to instruct medical negligence lawyers at Irwin Mitchell.
Peter died in 2015 and the claim was taken over by Dawn.
It is alleged that Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust had acted negligently by failing to identify the small bowel obstruction on the x-rays taken or the significance of the abnormal blood tests.
Ross McWilliams, the specialist medical negligence lawyer at Irwin Mitchell, said: “Shirley’s family have been left heartbroken after losing her.
“It has been an incredibly difficult time for Dawn to not only cope with losing her mother, and her father, but also come to terms with the fact that the hospital failed to treat Shirley correctly.”
By Sam Christie - The Sun UK
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