Complications from burns, such burns being from acid doused over 80% of Ms Chetty's body
AI-generated summary
Monika Chetty, aged 39, died from complications of severe acid burns covering 80% of her body sustained in early December 2013. She was found in bushland in West Hoxton on 4 January 2014 and died 27 days later at Concord Hospital. The coroner found this was a homicide by unknown person(s). Prior to the fatal attack, Monika had presented repeatedly to hospitals with unexplained burn injuries from 2012-2013, with varying explanations (cooking, radiator, car bonnet). These presentations were not systematically investigated to consider self-infliction or patterns of harm. Her deteriorating social circumstances, homelessness, involvement in immigration fraud scams, gambling debts, and extreme financial desperation created vulnerability. Clinical lessons include: healthcare providers should identify patterns of repeated, inconsistently explained injuries; mental health assessment should be offered to patients presenting with self-harm indicators; and vulnerable patients with multiple presentations warrant comprehensive safety assessment and social work involvement.
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Specialties
plastic and reconstructive surgeryemergency medicinepsychiatrygeneral medicine
Error types
diagnosticsystem
Clinical conditions
severe thermal burnschemical burnsacid burnsfull thickness burnscomplications of major trauma
Contributing factors
Severe thermal and chemical acid burns
Non-survivable injury severity
Delayed presentation to definitive care
Underlying social vulnerability and homelessness
Coroner's recommendations
The NSW Commissioner of Police cause the investigation into the death of Monika Chetty to be referred to or remain within the State Crime Command Unsolved Homicide Team for ongoing investigation, review, and monitoring.
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