Coronial
TASaged care

Coroner's Finding: de-identified BE

Demographics

85y, male

Date of death

2022-12-07

Finding date

2026-05-19

Cause of death

systemic sepsis due to infected right perineal ulcer and associated perianal abscess extending to the base of the right lobe of the prostate gland

AI-generated summary

An 85-year-old man with dementia and multiple comorbidities died of sepsis caused by an infected sacral pressure ulcer that developed and deteriorated while resident at an aged care facility. Initially assessed as stage 1/healed on admission, the pressure sore progressively worsened despite preventive measures. Critical failures in clinical management included: a delayed referral to wound care specialist (referred late October, reviewed only late November—a month later), inadequate pain relief despite a severe wound, inconsistent wound dressing documentation, and recurrent faecal contamination of dressings due to inadequate continence management. The facility's electronic records system may not have accurately reflected care provided. The coroner found that escalation to specialist review and more aggressive management strategies were warranted but did not occur. By the time specialist review occurred, the wound was extensive (stage 3/4) and infected. The patient developed fever and sepsis, requiring hospital admission where he transitioned to palliative care and died. Better wound management protocols, timely specialist referral, pain relief provision, and clearer documentation could have prevented this deterioration.

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

Contributing factors

  • Delayed referral to wound care specialist
  • Inadequate pain relief provision
  • Inadequate pressure relief and repositioning
  • Faecal contamination of wound dressing
  • Inadequate incontinence management
  • Gaps in documentation of care provided
  • Staff shortages and resource constraints
  • Communication difficulties between facility and family

Coroner's recommendations

  1. All staff be provided education and assessed for competency in wound classification, wound management, recognising and responding to a deteriorating wound, and timing of specialist intervention
  2. Policy and processes directed toward the prevention of pressure sores in residents be developed and instituted including repositioning, use of pressure relief aids, and use of barrier cream/skin care creams
  3. Training concerning appropriate documentation for routine interventions be developed
  4. Training regarding the provision of pain relief medication to include the importance of considering the nature of the injury in the assessment of need for pain relief
  5. Development of education and expectations regarding communication with the family of residents, the impact it may have on care and mechanisms and pathways for escalation and resolution of family concerns
Full text

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