Coventry Hospital: Man, 84, died on trolley 'after six-hour wait'
- Published
The daughter of a man who died in a hospital corridor after six hours on a trolley said he may still be alive if her pleas for help were acted on.
Emma Driver said her 84-year-old father, Donald, was only seen by nurses at University Hospital Coventry when he slid off the trolley he was left on.
He died moments later, shortly before 01:00 BST on 14 October.
The hospital trust said it was "investigating this matter thoroughly" and was in contact with the family.
Ms Driver called for paramedics at about 18:00 the day before, a Sunday, when her father was complaining of stomach pain, with symptoms similar to a stomach ulcer he had previously suffered with.
She told the ´óÏó´«Ã½ it was "extremely busy" when they arrived at the hospital and it was 90 minutes before paramedics could hand him over to hospital staff.
Mr Driver was left to wait on a trolley in the corridor, his daughter said, and still had not been seen by midnight, despite her asking for help multiple times.
He became increasingly unwell and, at about 00:30 on the Monday morning, started to vomit before sliding off the trolley.
"As he lay down and I saw his face, I knew he was gone," Ms Driver said. Her father was pronounced dead at 00:59.
"My dad was my world," she said. "Although he was elderly, he wasn't dying."
Ms Driver criticised hospital staff, saying: "I have lost my dad because of them."
"I believe had my father been prioritised, or I had been listened to and taken seriously then my father would still be here."
In a statement, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire Trust offered "sincere and heartfelt sympathies to Mr Driver's family and friends at this sad and difficult time".
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