A schoolboy was allegedly sent from home from hospital twice before later dying of Strep A.
Mohammad Izaan Danish, eight, was taken to Bradford Royal Infirmary on December 10 after his cough and temperature worsened.
Doctors gave him ibuprofen and sent him home after a six-hour wait for help, his mother Sajida Jabeen claimed.
Mohammad returned to the same hospital the next evening after he began suffering chest pains.
Eight-year-old Mohammad Izaan Danish was sent from home from hospital twice and left ‘suffocating’ on a waiting room floor before later dying of Strep A
Sajida Jabeen, 39, pleaded with doctors at Bradford Royal Infirmary (BRI) on December 10 to take her son Mohammad Izaan Danish’s symptoms seriously but claims he was given ibuprofen and sent home (Mohammad is pictured in hospital)
Strep A, medically known as Group A Streptococcus or Group A Strep, are bacteria that cause a range of infections
He endured another lengthy wait which saw him forced to sit on the hospital floor while ‘suffocating with chest pain’, according to Ms Jabeen. Mohammad was sent home after being given ibuprofen again.
Ms Jabeen, a mother-of-three, claimed the severity of his illness was only noted by a GP on December 12.
Recalling that appointment, the 39-year-old said: ‘The doctor was really, really shocked. He was really poorly.
‘He said: “Why didn’t you take him to the hospital?” I said, “I have been taking him but they’re not really doing that much”.
‘I quickly took him to the hospital. He had given me a note, and I gave it to them. They started checking on him, and that was it.’
But just over three weeks later, on January 6, Mohammad died from pneumonia — a known complication of Strep A.
Ms Jabeen said of her son: ‘He was just really friendly and happy, always smiling.
‘He really liked playing football. He was a fan of Manchester United. He wanted to do lots of things. He was a happy kid.
‘He was in year four, and he loved learning. He liked his teachers and his friends.’
A total of 30 under-18s have died of the usually harmless bug in England since the season kicked off in September.
For comparison, 27 youngsters died from the bacterial infection during the 2017/18 season, which health chiefs consider to be the last ‘bad’ year.
Strep A is normally a mild bacterial illness that causes respiratory symptoms such as a cough or sore throat. It can also lead to scarlet fever and impetigo.
However, it can also, albeit very rarely, lead to far more serious complications, which can be fatal.
This includes necrotising fasciitis, the flesh-eating disease, where bacteria enter the surface tissue through a cut, scrape or open sore.
But just over three weeks later, on January 6, Mohammad (pictured in hospital) died from pneumonia caused by Strep A – which has so far taken the lives of around 30 children in the UK this winter
Ms Jabeen, a full-time mother from Bradford, West Yorkshire, said Mohammad began to feel unwell around December 9 last year, suffering from a cough and a temperature
Of the first hospital visit, Ms Jabeen said: ‘I took him to the hospital, the BRI. There was a wait and they saw him and gave him ibuprofen.
‘And then after another wait, they gave him a nebulizer. Then they said, “He’s ok, he can go home.”
Ms Jabeen said the second visit was ‘worse’, as Mohammad ‘couldn’t even lie down’ due to his severe chest pain and instead wanted to sit up, but there were no chairs available.
She added: ‘They could have taken more care of him and taken him into a ward or something.
‘There was a four to six-hour wait, and then they gave him ibuprofen, which they shouldn’t have.’
Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust’s Chief Medical Officer, Dr Ray Smith: ‘I would like to send our sincere and heartfelt condolences to Izaan’s parents on the tragic death of their son.
‘I will conduct a thorough investigation and the findings will be shared with Izaan’s parents once completed.’
Source: | This article originally belongs to Dailymail.co.uk