Coronial
NSWother

Inquest into the death of Gary McKell

Deceased

Gary McKell

Demographics

67y, male

Coroner

Decision ofState Coroner Barnes

Date of death

2012-07-28

Finding date

2014-06-04

Cause of death

complications of blunt force head injuries

AI-generated summary

Gary McKell, aged 67, died from complications of blunt force head injury sustained during a physical altercation with his neighbour. After consuming approximately six beers, Mr McKell became angered by noise from his neighbour's power tools and confronted him. During the ensuing altercation, Mr McKell struck his neighbour with a tent pole. His neighbour defended himself by punching Mr McKell once, causing him to fall and suffer a severe head injury. Mr McKell was transported to Port Macquarie Base Hospital, then to John Hunter Hospital where he underwent decompressive craniotomy for intracranial bleeding, before being transferred to Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. He deteriorated progressively over two weeks and died without regaining consciousness. This case highlights the tragic consequences of escalating neighbour disputes and the significant risks posed by alcohol intoxication in precipitating violence. Clinical learning emphasises the importance of recognising alcohol's contribution to impulsive decision-making and aggressive behaviour, and the severe consequences of head trauma requiring urgent neurosurgical intervention.

AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes. Report an inaccuracy.

Specialties

neurosurgeryintensive careemergency medicinepathology

Drugs involved

alcohol

Clinical conditions

blunt force head injuryfractured skullsubdural haemorrhagesubarachnoid haemorrhageextradural haemorrhagetraumatic axonal injurybrain contusions and lacerationsischaemic injury

Procedures

decompressive craniotomy

Contributing factors

  • alcohol intoxication
  • escalation of neighbour dispute
  • physical altercation
  • initial head strike with tent pole
  • punch to the head
  • blunt force trauma with loss of consciousness
  • intracranial bleeding
Full text

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