Port Elizabeth hospital 'filing error' blamed for maggots in patient's wounds

31 January 2017 - 15:04 By Estelle Ellis
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Image: Gallo Images/Thinkstock

Nurses at Port Elizabeth's Livingstone Hospital claim that misfiled paperwork stopped them from changing the dressings of a patient who then had maggots hatching in his wounds.

This is according to an investigation by senior doctors.

Clint Morris‚ 40‚ was seriously injured in a motorcycling accident in November and had undergone multiple surgeries on both legs.

After he received a skin graft last month‚ maggots hatched in his wound after nurses failed to change his dressings.

Livingstone Hospital clinical services senior manager Dr Mojalefa Maseloa said the incident had prompted them to start a quality improvement project.

He said after Morris was sent back to Livingstone Hospital following surgery for a skin graft at Provincial Hospital‚ staff filed wound care instructions as part of his discharge papers and not as part of ongoing care instructions.

“Nurses could therefore not find it in his file.”

He said that due to the public holidays‚ nurses had struggled to get hold of the plastic surgeons who prescribed the wound care.

“We changed his bandages because we saw his wounds were seeping but we did not know what ointment to put on the wounds.”

This story appeared in The Herald.

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