Two new mums die of herpes shortly after giving delivery by caesarean part

Jul 27, 2023 at 12:16 PM
Two new mums die of herpes shortly after giving delivery by caesarean part

The 12 months 2018 was vital for a couple of purpose for the households of Kimberley Sampson and Samantha Mulcahy.

The two ladies welcomed their infants to this world however sadly each died of herpes, after giving delivery by caesarean part on the identical NHS Trust.

Kimberley, aged 29, died in May three weeks after giving delivery to her second little one.

Weeks later, Samantha, 32, died 10 days after she gave delivery to her first little one in early July.

Both Kimberley and Samantha had been handled in hospitals run by the East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust.

Samantha’s husband recalled in an interview with BBC: “She just kept saying, ‘It hurts. It hurts’, I told her… that I loved her and just to keep fighting.”

At the time, health officials stressed there was no link between the two deaths, but a BBC investigation in 2021 found the women had been operated on by the same surgeon.

However, a coroner concluded that it was “unlikely” that the surgeon was “the source of the infection”.

The cause of death was identified as a “disseminated” herpes infection before or around the delivery of their babies that caused multi-organ failure.

The trust’s chief executive Tracey Fletcher offered “sincere condolences” to the bereaved families in a statement.

Fletcher also said the trust had made changes since 2018 “to ensure that if such a rare infection arising from this virus is suspected, it will be treated more quickly”.

However, the families have been waiting five years for answers on how the women came to be infected with the virus.

In mid-July 2018, Kimberley’s mum, Yvette Sampson, 54, already knew of the death of Samantha.

She attended a meeting with senior clinicians at the trust, where she asked whether any of the same healthcare staff had treated the two women and was told it was something the trust was looking into.

The mum now believes the trust was not being honest with her.

The inquest into both women’s deaths heard the trust knew the young mums were being operated on by the same surgeon and by the time of that meeting, the trust was aware of this.

At the inquest, the trust did not deny that it withheld this information from the families.

The trust’s chief executive apologised after the inquest for the “additional and unnecessary suffering the trust has caused these families through failing to answer their questions after Kimberley and Samantha’s deaths and contributing to the delays in their inquests being heard”.

In the summer of 2021, Yvette found out through Freedom of Information requests that the trust had been encouraged to test the surgeon – to check if he could have infected the women, but it never did.

Despite the inquest ruling out human culpability of any of the medical staff involved and saying it was “unlikely” for the surgeon to be the reason for the herpes an infection, the coroner Catherine Wood, nonetheless criticised the NHS trust over the deaths of the two new mums.

The Mid Kent and Medway coroner said Kimberley could have been given an anti-viral treatment sooner.

Wood also added that in Samantha’s case “suspicion should have been raised” given the knowledge among staff from Kimberley’s earlier death.

At the inquest hearing at Kent County Hall in Maidstone, Wood said: “The earlier treatment is given, the better the outcome.”

Despite the coroner’s conclusion, both Yvette and Samantha’s mum, Nicola Foster, remain convinced the surgeon did infect their daughters.

Yvette added: “Whilst I have some answers as to how Kim came by her death – as a mother, there are still many questions I have about what happened, which remain outstanding.”