Post Magazine

Patient dies at Hong Kong public hospital after ventilation bag not connected to oxygen supply

A patient at a Hong Kong public hospital died after a ventilation bag used during his transfer between wards was not connected to an oxygen cylinder, the Hospital Authority revealed on Monday.

An investigation into the incident at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Yau Ma Tei was expected to be completed in eight weeks. The patient died on Sunday.

According to a statement by the authority, the patient had chronic illness and was admitted to the hospital last Thursday for severe acute pneumonia. He later developed respiratory failure.

The following morning, staff intubated and connected the patient to a mechanical ventilator to assist his breathing. His condition further deteriorated in the afternoon with septic shock and a continuously declining level of oxygen saturation.

At about 10pm on Friday, with the patient becoming critically ill, staff transferred him to the intensive care unit. During the transfer, which took two minutes, a self-inflating ventilation bag was used to ventilate the patient manually.

A nurse or a doctor can carry out the task of pumping oxygen to a patient. Photo: Sam Tsang

After arriving at the ICU, he was immediately reconnected to a ventilator. The patient developed cardiac arrest five minutes later.

Health care staff later found the ventilation bag was not connected to an oxygen cylinder.

While the patient's heartbeat resumed after resuscitation, he died on Sunday morning.

Professor David Hui Shu-cheong of Chinese University's department of medicine and therapeutics said the ventilation bag needed to be connected to an oxygen cylinder, while a medical worker manually pumped oxygen to the patient.

He said that such a task could be given to a doctor or nurse.

"If you deprive a patient from oxygenation, it will lead to profound lack of oxygen in the blood and injuries to cardiac muscles and conduction system," he said.

Hui added this would eventually lead to arrhythmia and cardiac arrest.

The hospital has referred the case to the coroner, and a review panel will be formed for thorough investigation to avoid a similar incident.

"The hospital is saddened by the patient's passing away and expresses its deepest condolences to the family," the authority's statement read.

It added the hospital had met the patient's family again on Monday to explain the incident and apologise. The hospital would keep in close contact and provide them with all necessary help.

The authority manages 43 public hospitals and institutions in Hong Kong.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2018. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from Post Magazine

Post Magazine6 min readWorld
Germany's China Shock: As Scholz Leaves Beijing, Others Raise Alarm About Waning Economic Honeymoon
For more than 20 years, Webasto has been at the heart of one of the great economic marriages of modern times. The German company from the industrial suburbs of Munich set up its first plant in Shanghai in 2001, the year China joined the World Trade O
Post Magazine6 min readCrime & Violence
'Historic Moment': Hong Kong Passes Domestic National Security Law After Marathon Session, Fast-tracking Legislation Shelved For 2 Decades
Lawmakers unanimously passed Hong Kong's domestic national security law on Tuesday night at the end of a marathon session, fast-tracking the constitutionally mandated legislation which had been shelved for more than two decades because of initial pub
Post Magazine2 min readCrime & Violence
Hong Kong Police Arrest 29-year-old Man Over Rape, Sex Offences After He Tries To Flee City
Hong Kong police have arrested a 29-year-old man over rape and other sex offences after he tried to flee the city following allegations made by six women. Superintendent Cheung Ting-fung of the organised crime and triad bureau on Saturday said the fo

Related Books & Audiobooks