User login
Nurse accused of murdering babies in her neonatal unit
Lucy Letby, 32, who worked at the Countess of Chester Hospital, is accused of multiple baby murders in the hospital’s neonatal unit from June 2015 to June 2016. She denies all charges.
Manchester Crown Court heard how Ms. Letby allegedly attempted to kill the children by injecting them with air, milk, or insulin, including two brothers from a set of triplets and one premature baby girl, who was only 98 minutes old.
Prosecutor Nicholas Johnson KC said the circumstances of the girl’s death were “an extreme example even by the standards of this case.”
“There were four separate occasions on which we allege Lucy Letby tried to kill her,” he said. “But ultimately at the fourth attempt, Lucy Letby succeeded in killing her.”
Attempts to murder the child ‘cold-blooded’ and ‘calculated’, says prosecutor
In the first alleged attempt, Ms. Letby injected the girl, identified for legal reasons as Child I, with air, but she was “resilient,” said Mr. Johnson. After the second attempt, Ms. Letby had stood in the doorway of Child I’s darkened room and commented that she looked pale. The designated nurse then approached and turned on the light, noticing that the child wasn’t breathing. After a third attempt the child was found to have excess air in her stomach, which had affected her breathing. Child I was then transferred to Arrowe Park Hospital, where she was stabilized before she was returned to Chester.
After the fourth attempt, Child I’s medical alarm rang, leading a nurse to spot Ms. Letby by the child’s incubator. Child I died that morning, said Mr. Johnson, who described the nurse’s attacks as premeditated. “It was persistent, it was calculated, and it was cold-blooded.”
The judge, Mr. Justice Goss, and jury heard how shortly after the parents were told of their child’s death, Ms. Letby approached the mother, who testified that the nurse was “smiling and kept going on about how she was present at the baby’s first bath and how much the baby had loved it.” She also sent a sympathy card to the parents, and the prosecutor says she kept an image of the card on her phone.
Doctor interrupted another alleged attempt
Dr. Ravi Jayaram, a paediatric consultant, had become suspicious of Ms. Letby in a number of unexplained child deaths. He later interrupted her as she allegedly tried to kill another baby, identified as Child K. He noticed that the nurse was alone with the baby and walked into the room, seeing Ms. Letby standing over the child’s incubator. He was “uncomfortable” as he had “started to notice a coincidence between unexplained deaths, serious collapses, and the presence of Lucy Letby,” said the prosecutor.
“Dr. Jayaram could see from the monitor on the wall that Child K’s oxygen saturation level was falling dangerously low, to somewhere in the 80s,” said Mr. Johnson. “He said an alarm should have been sounding as Child K’s oxygen levels were falling.” Despite this, the nurse had not called for assistance.
“We allege she was trying to kill Child K when Dr. Jayaram walked in,” Mr. Johnson said, adding that the child’s breathing tube was found dislodged. The prosecutor said it was possible for this to happen in an active baby, but Child K was very premature and had been sedated.
Despite his concerns, Dr. Jayaram did not make a note of his suspicions. Later that morning, Ms. Letby was again at Child K’s incubator calling for help. The nurse was assisting the baby with her breathing and the breathing tube was found to have slipped too far into her throat. The child was transferred to another hospital but later died. Ms. Letby is not accused of Child K’s murder.
However, after the death of Child K, Ms. Letby was moved to day shifts “because the consultants were concerned about the correlation between her presence and unexpected deaths and life-threatening episodes on the night shifts,” said Mr. Johnson. She was removed from the neonatal ward in June 2016 and moved to clerical duties where she would not come into contact with children.
Post-it note: Admission or anguish?
At the end of the prosecution’s presentation, Mr. Johnson mentioned a Post-it on which Ms. Letby had written, “I AM EVIL I DID THIS.” In the defense’s opening statements, Ben Myers KC, said the note was an “anguished outpouring of a young woman in fear and despair when she realises the enormity of what’s being said about her, in a moment to herself.”
He added that the nurse was dealing with employment issues at the time it was written, including a grievance procedure with the NHS Trust where she worked. Another note was shown on screens to the jury, which read: “Not good enough. I’m an awful person. I will never have children or marry. Despair.” and “I haven’t done anything wrong.”
Mr. Myers said that Ms. Letby was the type of person who often scribbles things down and the note was “nothing more extraordinary than that.”
In presenting the defense case, Mr. Myers argued that there was no evidence of Letby hurting the children, and that the prosecution’s case was “driven by the assumption that someone was doing deliberate harm” and that this was combined with “coincidence on certain occasions of Miss Letby’s presence.”
“What it isn’t driven by is evidence of Miss Letby actually doing what is alleged against her,” he added.
“There is a real danger that people will simply accept the prosecution theory of guilt, and that’s all we have so far,” Mr. Myers said. “A theory of guilt based firmly on coincidence – if anything can be based firmly on coincidence.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape UK.
Lucy Letby, 32, who worked at the Countess of Chester Hospital, is accused of multiple baby murders in the hospital’s neonatal unit from June 2015 to June 2016. She denies all charges.
Manchester Crown Court heard how Ms. Letby allegedly attempted to kill the children by injecting them with air, milk, or insulin, including two brothers from a set of triplets and one premature baby girl, who was only 98 minutes old.
Prosecutor Nicholas Johnson KC said the circumstances of the girl’s death were “an extreme example even by the standards of this case.”
“There were four separate occasions on which we allege Lucy Letby tried to kill her,” he said. “But ultimately at the fourth attempt, Lucy Letby succeeded in killing her.”
Attempts to murder the child ‘cold-blooded’ and ‘calculated’, says prosecutor
In the first alleged attempt, Ms. Letby injected the girl, identified for legal reasons as Child I, with air, but she was “resilient,” said Mr. Johnson. After the second attempt, Ms. Letby had stood in the doorway of Child I’s darkened room and commented that she looked pale. The designated nurse then approached and turned on the light, noticing that the child wasn’t breathing. After a third attempt the child was found to have excess air in her stomach, which had affected her breathing. Child I was then transferred to Arrowe Park Hospital, where she was stabilized before she was returned to Chester.
After the fourth attempt, Child I’s medical alarm rang, leading a nurse to spot Ms. Letby by the child’s incubator. Child I died that morning, said Mr. Johnson, who described the nurse’s attacks as premeditated. “It was persistent, it was calculated, and it was cold-blooded.”
The judge, Mr. Justice Goss, and jury heard how shortly after the parents were told of their child’s death, Ms. Letby approached the mother, who testified that the nurse was “smiling and kept going on about how she was present at the baby’s first bath and how much the baby had loved it.” She also sent a sympathy card to the parents, and the prosecutor says she kept an image of the card on her phone.
Doctor interrupted another alleged attempt
Dr. Ravi Jayaram, a paediatric consultant, had become suspicious of Ms. Letby in a number of unexplained child deaths. He later interrupted her as she allegedly tried to kill another baby, identified as Child K. He noticed that the nurse was alone with the baby and walked into the room, seeing Ms. Letby standing over the child’s incubator. He was “uncomfortable” as he had “started to notice a coincidence between unexplained deaths, serious collapses, and the presence of Lucy Letby,” said the prosecutor.
“Dr. Jayaram could see from the monitor on the wall that Child K’s oxygen saturation level was falling dangerously low, to somewhere in the 80s,” said Mr. Johnson. “He said an alarm should have been sounding as Child K’s oxygen levels were falling.” Despite this, the nurse had not called for assistance.
“We allege she was trying to kill Child K when Dr. Jayaram walked in,” Mr. Johnson said, adding that the child’s breathing tube was found dislodged. The prosecutor said it was possible for this to happen in an active baby, but Child K was very premature and had been sedated.
Despite his concerns, Dr. Jayaram did not make a note of his suspicions. Later that morning, Ms. Letby was again at Child K’s incubator calling for help. The nurse was assisting the baby with her breathing and the breathing tube was found to have slipped too far into her throat. The child was transferred to another hospital but later died. Ms. Letby is not accused of Child K’s murder.
However, after the death of Child K, Ms. Letby was moved to day shifts “because the consultants were concerned about the correlation between her presence and unexpected deaths and life-threatening episodes on the night shifts,” said Mr. Johnson. She was removed from the neonatal ward in June 2016 and moved to clerical duties where she would not come into contact with children.
Post-it note: Admission or anguish?
At the end of the prosecution’s presentation, Mr. Johnson mentioned a Post-it on which Ms. Letby had written, “I AM EVIL I DID THIS.” In the defense’s opening statements, Ben Myers KC, said the note was an “anguished outpouring of a young woman in fear and despair when she realises the enormity of what’s being said about her, in a moment to herself.”
He added that the nurse was dealing with employment issues at the time it was written, including a grievance procedure with the NHS Trust where she worked. Another note was shown on screens to the jury, which read: “Not good enough. I’m an awful person. I will never have children or marry. Despair.” and “I haven’t done anything wrong.”
Mr. Myers said that Ms. Letby was the type of person who often scribbles things down and the note was “nothing more extraordinary than that.”
In presenting the defense case, Mr. Myers argued that there was no evidence of Letby hurting the children, and that the prosecution’s case was “driven by the assumption that someone was doing deliberate harm” and that this was combined with “coincidence on certain occasions of Miss Letby’s presence.”
“What it isn’t driven by is evidence of Miss Letby actually doing what is alleged against her,” he added.
“There is a real danger that people will simply accept the prosecution theory of guilt, and that’s all we have so far,” Mr. Myers said. “A theory of guilt based firmly on coincidence – if anything can be based firmly on coincidence.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape UK.
Lucy Letby, 32, who worked at the Countess of Chester Hospital, is accused of multiple baby murders in the hospital’s neonatal unit from June 2015 to June 2016. She denies all charges.
Manchester Crown Court heard how Ms. Letby allegedly attempted to kill the children by injecting them with air, milk, or insulin, including two brothers from a set of triplets and one premature baby girl, who was only 98 minutes old.
Prosecutor Nicholas Johnson KC said the circumstances of the girl’s death were “an extreme example even by the standards of this case.”
“There were four separate occasions on which we allege Lucy Letby tried to kill her,” he said. “But ultimately at the fourth attempt, Lucy Letby succeeded in killing her.”
Attempts to murder the child ‘cold-blooded’ and ‘calculated’, says prosecutor
In the first alleged attempt, Ms. Letby injected the girl, identified for legal reasons as Child I, with air, but she was “resilient,” said Mr. Johnson. After the second attempt, Ms. Letby had stood in the doorway of Child I’s darkened room and commented that she looked pale. The designated nurse then approached and turned on the light, noticing that the child wasn’t breathing. After a third attempt the child was found to have excess air in her stomach, which had affected her breathing. Child I was then transferred to Arrowe Park Hospital, where she was stabilized before she was returned to Chester.
After the fourth attempt, Child I’s medical alarm rang, leading a nurse to spot Ms. Letby by the child’s incubator. Child I died that morning, said Mr. Johnson, who described the nurse’s attacks as premeditated. “It was persistent, it was calculated, and it was cold-blooded.”
The judge, Mr. Justice Goss, and jury heard how shortly after the parents were told of their child’s death, Ms. Letby approached the mother, who testified that the nurse was “smiling and kept going on about how she was present at the baby’s first bath and how much the baby had loved it.” She also sent a sympathy card to the parents, and the prosecutor says she kept an image of the card on her phone.
Doctor interrupted another alleged attempt
Dr. Ravi Jayaram, a paediatric consultant, had become suspicious of Ms. Letby in a number of unexplained child deaths. He later interrupted her as she allegedly tried to kill another baby, identified as Child K. He noticed that the nurse was alone with the baby and walked into the room, seeing Ms. Letby standing over the child’s incubator. He was “uncomfortable” as he had “started to notice a coincidence between unexplained deaths, serious collapses, and the presence of Lucy Letby,” said the prosecutor.
“Dr. Jayaram could see from the monitor on the wall that Child K’s oxygen saturation level was falling dangerously low, to somewhere in the 80s,” said Mr. Johnson. “He said an alarm should have been sounding as Child K’s oxygen levels were falling.” Despite this, the nurse had not called for assistance.
“We allege she was trying to kill Child K when Dr. Jayaram walked in,” Mr. Johnson said, adding that the child’s breathing tube was found dislodged. The prosecutor said it was possible for this to happen in an active baby, but Child K was very premature and had been sedated.
Despite his concerns, Dr. Jayaram did not make a note of his suspicions. Later that morning, Ms. Letby was again at Child K’s incubator calling for help. The nurse was assisting the baby with her breathing and the breathing tube was found to have slipped too far into her throat. The child was transferred to another hospital but later died. Ms. Letby is not accused of Child K’s murder.
However, after the death of Child K, Ms. Letby was moved to day shifts “because the consultants were concerned about the correlation between her presence and unexpected deaths and life-threatening episodes on the night shifts,” said Mr. Johnson. She was removed from the neonatal ward in June 2016 and moved to clerical duties where she would not come into contact with children.
Post-it note: Admission or anguish?
At the end of the prosecution’s presentation, Mr. Johnson mentioned a Post-it on which Ms. Letby had written, “I AM EVIL I DID THIS.” In the defense’s opening statements, Ben Myers KC, said the note was an “anguished outpouring of a young woman in fear and despair when she realises the enormity of what’s being said about her, in a moment to herself.”
He added that the nurse was dealing with employment issues at the time it was written, including a grievance procedure with the NHS Trust where she worked. Another note was shown on screens to the jury, which read: “Not good enough. I’m an awful person. I will never have children or marry. Despair.” and “I haven’t done anything wrong.”
Mr. Myers said that Ms. Letby was the type of person who often scribbles things down and the note was “nothing more extraordinary than that.”
In presenting the defense case, Mr. Myers argued that there was no evidence of Letby hurting the children, and that the prosecution’s case was “driven by the assumption that someone was doing deliberate harm” and that this was combined with “coincidence on certain occasions of Miss Letby’s presence.”
“What it isn’t driven by is evidence of Miss Letby actually doing what is alleged against her,” he added.
“There is a real danger that people will simply accept the prosecution theory of guilt, and that’s all we have so far,” Mr. Myers said. “A theory of guilt based firmly on coincidence – if anything can be based firmly on coincidence.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape UK.
Antiretroviral pill better at suppressing HIV in children
Dolutegravir suppresses HIV by inhibiting integrase, an enzyme that the virus needs to replicate.
The pill-based regimen, which researchers described as easier to take than standard treatment, reduced the chances of treatment failure among children aged 3-18 years by about 40%, compared with other treatments. Dolutegravir is already used for the suppression of HIV in adults.
“About 1.8 million children live with HIV but they have had limited treatment options, with medicines that taste unpalatable, that need to be taken twice a day, or that come in large pills that are difficult to swallow” said lead author Anna Turkova, MD, from the MRC clinical trials unit at UCL. “Dolutegravir is given in small tablets usually once a day and the baby pills can be dispersed in water, meaning it’s a lot easier for young children to take. This is important in encouraging uptake of the treatment and adherence to it over many years.
“Sadly, only about half of children living with HIV are currently receiving treatment, and those who are not treated face high risks of impaired immunity and worsening health.”
Study details
The randomized controlled trial, called ODYSSEY, involved more than 700 children from 29 clinical centers located in Africa, Europe, and Asia. The children were given either dolutegravir or standard anti-HIV drugs, and were followed up for at least 2 years.
The study showed that 14% of children receiving dolutegravir experienced treatment failure over 2 years, compared with 22% of those receiving standard treatment. Treatment failure was deemed to occur if measurable virus appeared in the blood or if the child had symptoms of HIV-related illness.
“Our findings provide strong evidence for the global rollout of dolutegravir for children with HIV,” said Diana Gibb, MD, also from the MRC clinical trials unit at UCL, principal investigator of the trial and one of the senior authors of the paper.
“Medical treatments for children often lag woefully behind those of adults because of the separate formulations and studies that are needed,” she added. “With the evidence from ODYSSEY which used simplified dosing of both adult and baby pills, this treatment gap has been reduced and we hope that countries can quickly scale up access to children globally.”
Simplified dosing
“Simplifying the dosing is crucial,” concurred Cissy Kityo Mutuluuza, MD, from the Joint Clinical Research Centre in Uganda, the country enrolling most children in the trial. “Older children being able to take the same tablets as adults immediately opens access to dolutegravir for the majority of children living with HIV. It greatly simplifies procurement for national health systems in low- and middle-income countries, and lowers costs.”
Evidence from adults shows dolutegravir has a high genetic barrier to resistance, meaning viruses are less likely to become resistant to it over time. This was confirmed in the ODYSSEY trial, with much less resistance occurring among children and adolescents on dolutegravir-based treatment. In addition, past studies of the drug have shown that it may be associated with weight gain in adults, but the findings were reassuring for children. Those given dolutegravir gained on average 1 kg more and grew 1 cm higher over the study period, indicating better growth rather than abnormal weight gain.
Early findings from the trial have informed new guidance by the World Health Organization, recommending the use of dolutegravir for children.
The study was sponsored by the Penta Foundation, an international independent research network, and funded by specialist pharmaceutical company ViiV Healthcare.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Dolutegravir suppresses HIV by inhibiting integrase, an enzyme that the virus needs to replicate.
The pill-based regimen, which researchers described as easier to take than standard treatment, reduced the chances of treatment failure among children aged 3-18 years by about 40%, compared with other treatments. Dolutegravir is already used for the suppression of HIV in adults.
“About 1.8 million children live with HIV but they have had limited treatment options, with medicines that taste unpalatable, that need to be taken twice a day, or that come in large pills that are difficult to swallow” said lead author Anna Turkova, MD, from the MRC clinical trials unit at UCL. “Dolutegravir is given in small tablets usually once a day and the baby pills can be dispersed in water, meaning it’s a lot easier for young children to take. This is important in encouraging uptake of the treatment and adherence to it over many years.
“Sadly, only about half of children living with HIV are currently receiving treatment, and those who are not treated face high risks of impaired immunity and worsening health.”
Study details
The randomized controlled trial, called ODYSSEY, involved more than 700 children from 29 clinical centers located in Africa, Europe, and Asia. The children were given either dolutegravir or standard anti-HIV drugs, and were followed up for at least 2 years.
The study showed that 14% of children receiving dolutegravir experienced treatment failure over 2 years, compared with 22% of those receiving standard treatment. Treatment failure was deemed to occur if measurable virus appeared in the blood or if the child had symptoms of HIV-related illness.
“Our findings provide strong evidence for the global rollout of dolutegravir for children with HIV,” said Diana Gibb, MD, also from the MRC clinical trials unit at UCL, principal investigator of the trial and one of the senior authors of the paper.
“Medical treatments for children often lag woefully behind those of adults because of the separate formulations and studies that are needed,” she added. “With the evidence from ODYSSEY which used simplified dosing of both adult and baby pills, this treatment gap has been reduced and we hope that countries can quickly scale up access to children globally.”
Simplified dosing
“Simplifying the dosing is crucial,” concurred Cissy Kityo Mutuluuza, MD, from the Joint Clinical Research Centre in Uganda, the country enrolling most children in the trial. “Older children being able to take the same tablets as adults immediately opens access to dolutegravir for the majority of children living with HIV. It greatly simplifies procurement for national health systems in low- and middle-income countries, and lowers costs.”
Evidence from adults shows dolutegravir has a high genetic barrier to resistance, meaning viruses are less likely to become resistant to it over time. This was confirmed in the ODYSSEY trial, with much less resistance occurring among children and adolescents on dolutegravir-based treatment. In addition, past studies of the drug have shown that it may be associated with weight gain in adults, but the findings were reassuring for children. Those given dolutegravir gained on average 1 kg more and grew 1 cm higher over the study period, indicating better growth rather than abnormal weight gain.
Early findings from the trial have informed new guidance by the World Health Organization, recommending the use of dolutegravir for children.
The study was sponsored by the Penta Foundation, an international independent research network, and funded by specialist pharmaceutical company ViiV Healthcare.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Dolutegravir suppresses HIV by inhibiting integrase, an enzyme that the virus needs to replicate.
The pill-based regimen, which researchers described as easier to take than standard treatment, reduced the chances of treatment failure among children aged 3-18 years by about 40%, compared with other treatments. Dolutegravir is already used for the suppression of HIV in adults.
“About 1.8 million children live with HIV but they have had limited treatment options, with medicines that taste unpalatable, that need to be taken twice a day, or that come in large pills that are difficult to swallow” said lead author Anna Turkova, MD, from the MRC clinical trials unit at UCL. “Dolutegravir is given in small tablets usually once a day and the baby pills can be dispersed in water, meaning it’s a lot easier for young children to take. This is important in encouraging uptake of the treatment and adherence to it over many years.
“Sadly, only about half of children living with HIV are currently receiving treatment, and those who are not treated face high risks of impaired immunity and worsening health.”
Study details
The randomized controlled trial, called ODYSSEY, involved more than 700 children from 29 clinical centers located in Africa, Europe, and Asia. The children were given either dolutegravir or standard anti-HIV drugs, and were followed up for at least 2 years.
The study showed that 14% of children receiving dolutegravir experienced treatment failure over 2 years, compared with 22% of those receiving standard treatment. Treatment failure was deemed to occur if measurable virus appeared in the blood or if the child had symptoms of HIV-related illness.
“Our findings provide strong evidence for the global rollout of dolutegravir for children with HIV,” said Diana Gibb, MD, also from the MRC clinical trials unit at UCL, principal investigator of the trial and one of the senior authors of the paper.
“Medical treatments for children often lag woefully behind those of adults because of the separate formulations and studies that are needed,” she added. “With the evidence from ODYSSEY which used simplified dosing of both adult and baby pills, this treatment gap has been reduced and we hope that countries can quickly scale up access to children globally.”
Simplified dosing
“Simplifying the dosing is crucial,” concurred Cissy Kityo Mutuluuza, MD, from the Joint Clinical Research Centre in Uganda, the country enrolling most children in the trial. “Older children being able to take the same tablets as adults immediately opens access to dolutegravir for the majority of children living with HIV. It greatly simplifies procurement for national health systems in low- and middle-income countries, and lowers costs.”
Evidence from adults shows dolutegravir has a high genetic barrier to resistance, meaning viruses are less likely to become resistant to it over time. This was confirmed in the ODYSSEY trial, with much less resistance occurring among children and adolescents on dolutegravir-based treatment. In addition, past studies of the drug have shown that it may be associated with weight gain in adults, but the findings were reassuring for children. Those given dolutegravir gained on average 1 kg more and grew 1 cm higher over the study period, indicating better growth rather than abnormal weight gain.
Early findings from the trial have informed new guidance by the World Health Organization, recommending the use of dolutegravir for children.
The study was sponsored by the Penta Foundation, an international independent research network, and funded by specialist pharmaceutical company ViiV Healthcare.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE