Aspiration of gastric content (due to choking on food)
AI-generated summary
Christopher Barca, a 57-year-old man with Down syndrome and intellectual disability living in a Department of Human Services group home, died from aspiration of gastric content. He had oropharyngeal dysphagia, epilepsy, and a history of chest infections. While eating his evening meal on 21 May 2011, he began to shake and cough. Staff performed back thrusts and moved him to recovery position, but he became unresponsive with cyanosis. Despite CPR and paramedic resuscitation attempts, he could not be revived. The autopsy confirmed extensive aspiration into the trachea and bronchi. Clinical lessons include ensuring staff vigilance for aspiration warning signs in dysphagic patients, strict adherence to individualised mealtime guidelines developed by speech pathologists, and prompt recognition that choking may trigger agonal seizures rather than primary epileptic events. Enhanced staff training on aspiration precautions and swallowing safety protocols could have been beneficial.
AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes.
This page reproduces or summarises information from publicly available findings published by Australian coroners' courts. Coronial is an independent educational resource and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of any coronial court or government body.
Content may be incomplete, reformatted, or summarised. All court orders for redaction and non-publication are respected; documents with technically defective redaction have been excluded from the database entirely. Always refer to the original court publication for the authoritative record.
Copyright in original materials remains with the relevant government jurisdiction. AI-generated summaries and tagging are for educational purposes only, may contain inaccuracies, and must not be treated as legal documents. We welcome feedback for correction —