Flair Showers Limited acquires London-based luxury shower business

Essex-based premium shower screen designer and manufacturer MSCLUK Ltd (Majestic) has been acquired by Flair Showers Limited (Flair). The deal, that completed on 15 January 2021, was supported by Tees Law Corporate team and FRP Advisory.

The long-standing family firm and client of Tees Law, whose products feature in luxury hotels and residential developments across London and the South East, will now become part of Ireland’s oldest manufacturer of shower doors and bath screens. The deal is expected to generate significant growth opportunities for both businesses, with Majestic’s second-generation management team to remain in place.

Tees Law’s Corporate team advised on the deal, which allowed Majestic to build on its more than 50-year history and enabled Flair to see the potential to grow the business and expand on its excellent reputation and product range. Working closely with the management team at Majestic, Tees Law, and FRP Advisory, secured a deal that met the shareholders’ expectations, with upside structures included for management to benefit from future growth.

Tom King, Managing Director of Majestic said: “We had a great experience from start to finish, I found Charles and Abigail offered clear and understandable legal advice, with both fully cognisant of the commercial drivers behind the deal. They explained legal risk in an easy to understand way and were willing to put the hard work in and correspond even at the most antisocial times.” 

Lucy Folley, Partner and head of Corporate at Tees Law, said: “In addition to the uncertainty surrounding COVID-19 and Brexit, this was a complex and time-consuming transaction due to our client being set up as a result of a pre-pack administration, yet Charles and Abigail were able to offer detailed and timely advice to one of our long-standing clients.  They have been extremely happy with our work and we wish them the best going forward.”  

Dave Howes, Corporate Finance Partner at FRP, said: “Despite the ongoing uncertainty relating to the COVID-19 pandemic and the nascent impact of Brexit, this deal puts both businesses in a strong position to further the excellent reputation and range of products they have developed for more than half a century. Martin Murphy and the team at Flair Showers were quick to recognise The Majestic Shower Company’s potential for growth and I look forward to seeing it thrive with their support.”

Newborn baby boy’s death due to hospital neglect

An Inquest conducted by the Hertfordshire Coroner Service has concluded that aspects of the events leading up to the sad death in hospital of Eddie Coffey, a one-day-old baby boy were so unsatisfactory that they amounted to neglect.

The hearing at Hatfield learned that Eddie Coffey had died in the neonatal intensive care unit at Luton & Dunstable Hospital on 14 January 2019, having been transferred from the Lister Hospital in Stevenage due to major complications following his birth there the previous night.

Eddie’s 30-year-old mother, Hannah Coffey from Hoddesdon, already had a two-year-old child and was seven weeks pregnant with Eddie when, on 29 May 2018, she was assessed by the Lister Hospital as low-risk as regards antenatal care.

In August, Hannah’s history was reviewed during her visit to the hospital’s Consultant Clinic. She was already taking aspirin in view of raised blood pressure during her earlier pregnancy and she was to have third-stage active management with regular blood pressure checks from 24 weeks.

Delivery

On 13 January 2019, Hannah experienced contractions and was admitted to the midwifery-led unit at the Lister. Initial monitoring at 1815 showed that the fetal heart rate was within the normal range and it remained so for over four hours as contractions became more frequent.

At 2240, a large deceleration in heart-rate was noted and the Lister’s Consultant-led unit (CLU) was informed of this. Minutes later, Hannah was transferred to the CLU and a cardiotocograph (CTG) was commenced to monitor fetal heart rate and contractions.

Over the next 10 minutes fetal heart rate was recorded as within normal range, and birth was imminent, so a request for the Registrar to attend was cancelled. Eddie was delivered just before 2330, but his condition was concerning.

Resuscitation

The emergency buzzer was used to call for resuscitation and the neonatal team took over, with the Locum Registrar on call for Paediatrics attending.

Resuscitation was provided using an IPPV ventilator, with cardiac compression, until ETT intubation was ready at 2350. Eddie’s heart rate then fell further, prompting re-intubation with a narrower tube, and his heart rate improved.

At around midnight, the Neonatal Consultant arrived and tests of venous gas indicated metabolic acidosis, a serious electrolyte disorder. Eddie was transferred to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), where fluids and medication were administered while ventilation continued.

Suspecting hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE), a brain damage, the consultant arranged transfer to the NICU at Luton & Dunstable Hospital for possible therapeutic hypothermia treatment. Baby Eddie was transferred there in the early hours but sadly died later that day.

Cause of death

A post-mortem at Great Ormond Street Hospital found that the cause of Eddie’s death was perinatal asphyxia.

A Serious Incident Investigation by East and North Hertfordshire NHS Trust followed. The investigation report concluded that at a crucial time in the proceedings the CTG appeared to have recorded the mother’s heart rate, not the baby’s, thus preventing recognition of fetal hypoxia. This was likewise the opinion of independent expert evidence heard by the Coroner such that earlier identification of Eddie’s condition would have improved his outcome.  Such a failing, the Coroner found, amounted to neglect.

“Correct, effective use and interpretation of a baby and mother’s heart rate is helped by a CTG machine but it still needs to be interpreted responsibly and then appropriately acted upon. Here the Coroner determined on all of the evidence that it was neglect to fail to provide such basic care to Eddie and that this may have avoided such a tragic outcome,” said specialist medical solicitor Tim Deeming of Tees Law, acting for parents Hannah and Thom Coffey. “The inquest has been very challenging for the family and whilst we understand that the Lister have been looking to improve, we want to ensure that this does not arise for any other family, especially given the findings from the national Each Baby Counts review and the concerns raised around such preventable outcomes.”

Hannah’s concern for others

“Saying goodbye to our beautiful boy only hours after he had been born has left us all with a hole in our hearts from which we will never recover,” Hannah Coffey reflects.

“Not for a moment did I imagine that we could arrive at hospital with a healthy baby and leave without him in our arms. Like many expectant parents we put our trust in the care we would receive. 

Knowing that a lack of competence in the use of vital medical equipment could affect other families in a similar way is driving us to raise awareness of the need to ensure proper training and use of equipment to help save the lives of other babies.”

Norfolk boy died from undiagnosed bowel condition after surgery delay

Norfolk Coroner’s Court has issued its conclusions in the tragic case of an eight-year-old boy from Harleston, noting that the gravity of the child’s condition and the need for surgery were not recognised by paediatric staff at the Norfolk & Norwich University Hospital.

The inquest had heard that Charlie Goodwin died at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge, on 6 September 2019, following a move from Norfolk & Norwich, where emergency surgery had been conducted hours earlier.

In her written statement for the Coroner, Charlie’s mother, Nicola Goodwin, explained how the happy, football-mad youngest of her six children had been seemingly healthy until a vomiting episode in December 2018 followed by abdominal pains and prolonged loss of appetite.

Early in 2019, Charlie’s abdomen became distended, and the family’s GP shared his mother’s concern about this at a March 2019 consultation. Blood tests ruled out food intolerances, so further investigations began at Norfolk & Norwich University Hospital.

Concerned about worsening abdominal pain and uneaten school lunches, Nicola sought an early hospital appointment, and Charlie was seen at Norwich on 18 July and given an abdominal X-ray. The report showed large bowel dilatation, which Nicola discovered could be due to a blockage.

No follow-up hospital appointment was forthcoming, but on 25 July, Nicola took Charlie to the nurse practitioner because he was feverish with possible symptoms of a urinary infection. The nurse suggested heatstroke as the likely cause.

Symptoms intensified

Over the next few days, Charlie’s symptoms intensified, and a call to NHS111 prompted a visit to the local Beccles Hospital. Checks found nothing wrong, as did a subsequent doctor’s appointment, at which a urine sample was taken and antibiotics prescribed as a precaution.

When Charlie’s temperature hit 40.5oC the next day, and his abdominal pain became severe, Nicola suspected a blockage and took him straight to A&E, where checks for infection were negative and examination by several doctors also found nothing, so he was discharged.

Fever and pain on 2 August led Nicola to take Charlie back to Norfolk & Norwich, where a children’s emergency doctor suspected meningitis, ordering a head scan and lumbar puncture. The radiologist refused a scan, doubting the necessity, but Charlie was admitted later that day.

Overnight on 4 August, the paediatric surgeon was called; he noted Charlie’s distended abdomen and ordered an abdominal X-ray and MRI scan, though the scan never happened, and Nicola was not told why. A heart scan was done and revealed a slight murmur, but no action followed that.

‘Medical mystery’

Inconclusive abdominal ultrasounds were also taken, though Nicola learned weeks later that malrotation meant Charlie’s intestines had not formed properly.  Some blood tests but no further scans were carried out before Charlie was discharged on 7 August, described as ‘a medical mystery’.

Pain and lack of appetite continued, and on 14 August, Charlie had a barium swallow test, ordered earlier, which produced a ‘normal’ result but did not cover all of the bowel. A urodynamics test followed for continence issues, which Nicola suspected were linked to the other symptoms.

Charlie returned to school in September but was not eating his packed lunches. On 5 September, he also left his dinner and began vomiting, though with nothing to bring up. A 999 call, prompted by Charlie screaming out in pain and vomiting, brought only an instruction to use her GP or out-of-hours surgery.

Charlie vomited repeatedly and continued to scream, groan and writhe in pain when driven instead to Norfolk & Norwich A&E, which sent him straight to the Children’s Emergency Department. His temperature and blood pressure were very low, and his heart rate was very high. He was put on intravenous fluids, and a surgical review was sought, but the paediatric surgical registrar was already busy.

Despite Charlie’s presentation and a doctor’s request for urgent surgical review at around 22:15hrs, it was not until midnight that the paediatric surgical registrar reviewed Charlie, noting that there was no need for surgical intervention and put forward a plan for conservative treatment. Charlie’s situation worsened throughout the night, several further requests for surgical assessment were made, and hours later, at 2am following escalation to the paediatric surgeon, the surgeon examined Charlie’s enlarged, hard, blue tummy and declared that urgent exploratory surgery was needed as the cause was unclear.

During the preparation for surgery, Nicola exclaimed that Charlie’s pupils were dilated, and a nurse found them unresponsive. Administering oxygen brought a brief reaction, but a doctor sounded the emergency alarm, and Nicola had to leave.

Cardiac arrests

A little later, a nurse came to tell a stunned Nicola that Charlie’s heart had stopped and they were responding to that. Despite two cardiac arrests, the plan for surgery stood, but Nicola was told that her very sick son might not make it.

Charlie went to the theatre at 5 am and an hour later was in recovery, a doctor telling the family he had intestinal malrotation causing a twisted bowel. Later that morning, they were told he would be transferred to the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) at Addenbrooke’s Hospital.

A third cardiac arrest occurred as Charlie was switched to the children’s ambulance equipment, another while switching at Addenbrooke’s and a fifth after arrival in the PICU. The family were told further CPR would mean no quality of life due to brain damage and multiple organ failure.

At the bedside, the distressed family witnessed blood pouring first from Charlie’s operation wound and then his nostrils. His parents made the agonising decision not to resuscitate him after his next cardiac arrest and were there when he sadly died at 6.20 pm on 6 September.

“There were missed opportunities to give young Charlie Goodwin the timely and appropriate medical treatment that his intestinal malrotation required,” asserts specialist solicitor of Tees Law, acting for the bereaved Goodwin family.

“The final opportunity was at the Norfolk & Norwich University Hospital on that fateful evening in September last year. Prompt and effective emergency surgery could possibly have averted the catastrophic outcome that followed a delay of several hours.”

“The assessment by the paediatric surgical registrar was not acceptable, based on the clinical circumstances,” Tees law explains. “The paediatric surgical registrar did not recognise the severity of Charlie’s illness, and this error delayed the treatment, which could have saved Charlie’s life.

“Following the sad outcome, the hospital’s medical director requested an ‘invited clinical record review’ of the case by the Royal College of Surgeons. The RCS report dated 29 June 2020 formed an important part of evidence for the inquest Coroner.”

NHS Trust accepts RCS findings

The RCS review team investigated various aspects of Charlie’s treatment. Their report made recommendations to address patient safety risks and aspects of the case that pointed to a need for service improvements.

The review team was concerned about the six-hour gap before Charlie was seen by a consultant on the evening of his emergency admission on 5 September 2019. They recommended that:  “To facilitate service improvement and reduce the possibility of a similar tragic, catastrophic incident, the Children’s Early Warning Score (CEWS) is reviewed and may be refined by the addition of information from blood gas (lactate) analysis to trigger an automatic senior review escalation.”

Other recommendations for action by the Trust to improve service included undertaking a review of the out-of-hours junior staff cover for paediatric surgery, reassessing the adequacy of facilities for critically ill children in the Children’s Emergency Department at Norwich, and ensuring that information in clinical notes avoids judgmental language and remains factual.

Having received and read the RCS report, on 30 June, the Trust’s medical director sent Charlie’s parents a copy with a letter expressing sincere and heartfelt apologies and condolences and assuring them that the Trust accepted the review conclusions in full and was working hard to address them.

The letter also said, “The key conclusion that stands out to me, and I am sure it will to you also, is that the assessment made of Charlie on 5 September 2019 by the paediatric registrar was not acceptable and that there was a missed opportunity to discuss Charlie’s care in a more urgent manner with the paediatric consultant. The investigation has concluded that had there been a more urgent response, there may have been an opportunity to save Charlie’s life.”

Life could have been saved

This position was reiterated on the Trust’s behalf during the current hearing by the consultant paediatrician, who agreed that the paediatric registrar’s assessment was unacceptable and acknowledged that ‘the level of care we normally provide and that Charlie deserved was not provided that night’.

Under questioning by Counsel, the consultant accepted that the registrar failed to recognise the severity of Charlie’s illness as evidenced by blood gases, delaying by several hours emergency surgery that could have saved his life, particularly if he had been taken to theatre before his first cardiac arrest.

Inquest Conclusions

The Coroner’s conclusions were: “Charlie had a history of abdominal distension and vomiting. He had several admissions to hospital and underwent extensive examinations and tests. He was admitted to Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital on 5 September 2019 presenting as very unwell and in shock. During late 5 September 2019 Charlie was reviewed from a surgical perspective, and the gravity of Charlie’s condition and the need for surgery were not recognised. Surgical advice was not sought from the on-call Consultant.

“Charlie’s condition deteriorated further, and it was not until it was re-escalated to the medical team that the need for surgery was recognised. Charlie did not undergo surgery until the early hours of 6 September 2019, when an emergency laparotomy was performed. Charlie’s condition remained serious. Later that day, he was transferred to Addenbrooke’s Hospital, where his condition continued to deteriorate, and he died. Charlie Goodwin died from a rare and undiagnosed bowel malrotation and midgut volvulus.”

Under her Regulation 28 duty to prevent future deaths, the Coroner has noted that she will write to the General Medical Council, inviting them to have a recording of the inquest and informing them that they may wish to investigate the paediatric surgical registrar’s evidence and fitness to practice.

Having heard the Inquest outcome, Tees Law said, “Had Charlie been assessed properly, it is likely that he would have been taken to surgery much earlier, well before his condition deteriorated further and he suffered from a cardiac arrest. Had that been the case, Charlie’s chances of survival would have been much greater, and it is likely that his life would have been saved.”

Tees Law added, “Charlie’s mum Nicola and the whole family are desperate to ensure this never happens to anyone else. They are devastated by the loss of their wonderful, incredibly loving and funny son and brother. They want to raise general and medical awareness of this rare condition and hope to do so in Charlie’s memory.”