Yusuf Mahmud Nazir, 5, died eight days after he was seen at Rotherham Hospital and sent home with antibiotics despite his mother’s instinct that something more serious was wrong
A little boy died of multiple organ failure after doctors repeatedly ignored his mother’s instinct that something was wrong with her son, a report has found.
Five-year-old Yusuf Mahmud Nazir died on November 23, 2022, eight days after he was seen at Rotherham Hospital and sent home with antibiotics. A previous report into Yusuf’s case, by independent consultants and published by NHS South Yorkshire, found his care was appropriate and “an admission was not clinically required”, but this was rejected by his family.
Yusuf’s uncle Zaheer Ahmed has always said they were told “there are no beds and not enough doctors” in the emergency department, and that Yusuf should have been admitted and given intravenous antibiotics in Rotherham. It comes after the best and worst GP surgeries across the UK were named – check your area.
A new report published today by NHS England said in its conclusions: “Our primary finding is that the parental concerns, particularly the mother’s instinct that her child was unwell, were repeatedly not addressed across services.
“A reliance on clinical metrics over caregiver insight caused distress for the family. This led to a lack of shared decision-making and there was limited evidence of collaborative discussions with Yusuf’s family around clinical decisions, leading to a sense of exclusion and reduced trust in care plans.”
Yusuf, who had asthma, was taken to the GP with a sore throat and feeling unwell on November 15. He was prescribed antibiotics by an advanced nurse practitioner. Later that evening, his parents took him to Rotherham Hospital urgent & emergency care centre where he was seen in the early hours of the morning, after a six-hour wait.
Yusuf was discharged with a diagnosis of severe tonsillitis and an extended prescription of antibiotics. Two days later Yusuf was given further antibiotics by his GP for a possible chest infection, but his family became so concerned they called an ambulance and insisted the paramedics take him to Sheffield Children’s Hospital rather than Rotherham.
Yusuf was admitted to the intensive care unit on November 21 but developed multi-organ failure and suffered several cardiac arrests which he did not survive.
The 2023 report said there was only one doctor in the paediatric UECC on November 15 and, after midnight, that medic was responsible for covering adults and children.
It added that the doctor who saw Yusuf is an experienced UECC doctor who would not have needed to refer to a paediatrician to admit him.