Mum dies after ambulance just 6 minutes from her home was CANCELLED – as dad slams ‘I’ll be angry until the day I die’
A MUM died after an ambulance was cancelled just six minutes away from her home, an inquest has heard.
Karen Ovenell, 43, dialled 999 and told the operator she was suffering sharp pains in her chest.
An ambulance crew was initially dispatched to her house in Harrietsham, Kent, but was then stood down.
The call handler told Karen to sleep and book a GP appointment the next day or go to a busy A&E that night.
Karen suffered sharp and shooting pains for a week before she made the call.
Her symptoms worsened on August 15 and she felt pain in her neck, ears and arm.
Her dad Arthur Ovenell, 68, has slammed the ambulance service and NHS for cancelling the emergency vehicle.
He told KentOnline: “If they had turned up that night she could have stood a chance.
“I really believe that the ambulance service and NHS let her down.
“If the call handler had done their job properly, Karen would be here.”
Karen’s distraught father added that he will be “angry with them until the day he dies”.
An inquest in Maidstone heard how clinical supervisor Joshua Aicken-Bowley decided Karen’s symptoms weren’t cardiac based.
When giving evidence, he said: “I have never seen anyone present heart attack symptoms like this before.
“I wasn’t clinically suspicious of a coronary cause. If we believe an ambulance isn’t required we would stand it down.”
Mr Aicken-Bowley has since left his role at the South East Coast Ambulance Service (SECAmb).
Karen’s cause of death was given as ischemic heart disease in a pathology report.
What is coronary heart disease (CHD)?
CORONARY heart disease (CHD) is a major cause of death in the UK and worldwide.
CHD is sometimes called ischaemic heart disease or coronary artery disease.
Symptoms of coronary heart disease (CHD)
The main symptoms of coronary heart disease are:
- chest pain (angina)
- shortness of breath
- pain in your neck, shoulders, jaw or arms
- feeling faint
- feeling sick (nausea)
But not everyone has the same symptoms and some people may not have any before coronary heart disease is diagnosed.
Source: NHS