By Louise Milligan.
A Melbourne mother has revealed her heartache that a Victorian Coroner has not been able to find a clear cause of death or deficiencies in care at a private maternity hospital where her newborn baby died.
A tearful Sonja Jamsek told 7.30 she was bitterly disappointed by the finding, which was released on Tuesday.
Coroner Phillip Byrne found Summer Jamsek, who was born on April 4, 2010 at Melbourne’s Frances Perry House, died with a complex condition known as pulmonary hypertension.
But he was unable to find conclusively that it was caused by an infection which should have been treated earlier by antibiotics by Summer’s paediatrician.
An autopsy did not find the presence of any infection, however, independent experts who gave evidence for the Jamsek family said that could have been because the baby was given high-grade antibiotics in the hours before her death, when she was already gravely ill.
Ms Jamsek believes Summer died because of a cascading series of delays and missed opportunities by the midwives and doctors treating her.
“She never had an opportunity to survive, because she wasn’t given the medical treatment that she deserved,” Ms Jamsek told 7.30.
“I’m grieving for the child I’ll never get to know.
“I’ll never see the first day at school, I’ll never see the wedding, I’ll never see her walk – I’ve been robbed of all of Summer’s firsts.”
‘I knew then and there … my baby was going to die’
Summer did not cry until almost seven hours after she was born. By that time she was desperately ill and doctors were working on her little body, preparing for the Newborn Emergency Transport Service (NETS) newborn ambulance team to arrive.