A woman has been awarded £27,000 after a hospital began a Caesarean without giving her adequate pain relief.
Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust paid the sum after admitting the woman was not given enough anaesthetic when surgeons at Queen Elizabeth Hospital cut her open to deliver her first child.
The patient had been admitted to hospital in labour in January 2013 and had been given an epidural.
After nearly two hours of active pushing and two attempts at assisted delivery, a decision was taken to carry out a Caesarean.
The epidural was removed shortly after she arrived in theatre but she was not given any additional anaesthetic before surgery started.
When the operation began, the woman felt excruciating pain from the surgeon's knife. Only then was she given more pain relief.
Clinical negligence firm BL Claims Solicitors settled her case.
The claimant, who has since had a second child, was represented by Patricia Wakeford, a dual-qualified midwife and solicitor.
She said: "Understandably, my client found the experience of her first child's delivery to be extremely distressing. She has since suffered from frequent nightmares, severe anxiety and depressive symptoms which led to a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder.
"It is hoped that with the help of therapy, she will overcome her ongoing anxieties and be able to enjoy life with her family."
Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust admitted several allegations including a failure to provide adequate pain relief, failure to inform the patient of the removal of her epidural and poor record-keeping.
I Quit My 6-Figure Career to Teach Yoga
Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust paid the sum after admitting the woman was not given enough anaesthetic when surgeons at Queen Elizabeth Hospital cut her open to deliver her first child.
The patient had been admitted to hospital in labour in January 2013 and had been given an epidural.
After nearly two hours of active pushing and two attempts at assisted delivery, a decision was taken to carry out a Caesarean.
The epidural was removed shortly after she arrived in theatre but she was not given any additional anaesthetic before surgery started.
When the operation began, the woman felt excruciating pain from the surgeon's knife. Only then was she given more pain relief.
Clinical negligence firm BL Claims Solicitors settled her case.
The claimant, who has since had a second child, was represented by Patricia Wakeford, a dual-qualified midwife and solicitor.
She said: "Understandably, my client found the experience of her first child's delivery to be extremely distressing. She has since suffered from frequent nightmares, severe anxiety and depressive symptoms which led to a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder.
"It is hoped that with the help of therapy, she will overcome her ongoing anxieties and be able to enjoy life with her family."
Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust admitted several allegations including a failure to provide adequate pain relief, failure to inform the patient of the removal of her epidural and poor record-keeping.
I Quit My 6-Figure Career to Teach Yoga
I was 31, the head of PR
for a $750 billion financial services company, and I was making a
six-figure salary. Then I gave it all up to teach yoga and write. It was
as simple and terrifying as that.
For
nearly 10 years, I slogged through brain-numbing, red-tape-filled,
dismal days in an industry devoted to nothing more than the altar of
making money. Because of this, I ended up leaving my financially
lucrative, comfortable career because I felt like my soul was being
eroded.
Beyond
soul-erosion (which is obviously hard to measure), the fundamental
problem was that I worked a high-stress job in a morally bereft
industry, and I traveled constantly. I was exhausted. This sucked time
away from my family, friends, and fiancé, who also traveled a lot for
work. At one point, we kept our suitcases by the door, which was was
easier than repeatedly dragging them out of storage in our tiny city
apartment.
Because of
the stress, I turned to yoga for solace. I'd run to class after work,
late and stressed, jittery from too much coffee, and harried from
another frantic day of putting out fires. Then I'd focus, breathe, and
unwind for an hour-and-a-half, floating out calm and rejuvenated.
A wise voice inside of me said that I wasn't doing what I should be doing. But I was too busy to listen. I had a career—and I told myself that was enough.
For a long time it kind of was.
I'd grown up poor, living in hand-me-downs, constantly worrying about
money. I was the first one in my family to go to college and I worked my
way through. I majored in more-likely-to-get-a-job print
communications, instead of my-heart-yearns-to-write-books English. I
didn't have the luxury of book-writing dreams. I had student-loan
reality.
I didn't have the luxury of book-writing dreams. I had student-loan reality.
What I learned is that the
problem with tying yourself to what you think you "have" to do instead
of what your heart yearns to do is that a chasm grows between the two.
Decades can disappear into that chasm, while the inauthenticity of
living a life that you know you shouldn't be living chips away until
you're worn down to an unrecognizable fragment of yourself.
I
hit a low point at a branding summit, which took place high in the
Colorado mountains. Dizzy from the altitude and exhausted from
back-to-back day-long sessions followed by late, wine-soaked business
dinners, I woke up in the middle of the night with no idea where I
was—literally or figuratively.
I
desperately wanted to be back in my little apartment, snuggling with my
fiancé. But I was 2,000 miles away on a mountain, and he was in London,
also on business. Between our schedules and the time difference, we
hadn't spoken in days. I'd told myself we were a power couple, but at
that point, it barely felt like we were a couple at all. Something had
to change.
I continued
seeking solace in yoga. Back home, I enrolled in yoga teacher-training
as a way to deepen my practice and seek greater solace. I had no
intention of actually teaching—I hadn't busted my butt working my way
through college to do work that didn't require a degree. I told myself
that I had to stay in my career.
Meanwhile,
the financial industry was rollicking on unsteady tracks. The cutthroat
culture intensified. When my new, less-experienced-than-me boss
unceremoniously announced at a company-wide meeting that she'd taken
over a major initiative I'd been leading successfully for months without
so much as a heads-up, it was the last straw. I gave my notice.
When my new, less-experienced-than-me boss announced that she'd taken over a major initiative I'd been leading for months, it was the last straw.
So I decided to take the summer off, teach yoga, regroup, and then,
I thought, go back to my high-powered, PR career. By this time, I was
married, and my husband enthusiastically endorsed my plan. But
my childhood-born fears about money gnawed at me when I thought of
quitting my job. I reassured myself I could supplement teaching with
consulting work. I was determined to pull my own weight.
My
first morning home, I roamed aimlessly around the apartment, feeling
lost, alone, and untethered. Trying to stay calm, I busied myself
searching for teaching opportunities.
I arrived to teach my
first class—armed with 12 pages of notes. I was so nervous my teeth
chattered. That hadn't happened when I gave presentations at
work, striding to the podium in a suit, high heels, and a face covered
in makeup. But now there were no high heels or a podium. I couldn't hide
under a suit or makeup. It was just me, barefoot, bare-faced, in yoga
clothes...terrified, and, perhaps for the first time, authentic.
At
my lead, a class of stressed people breathed, focused, and
unwound…floating out calm and rejuvenated. It felt exhilarating to be
part of that—a link in the yoga lineage, helping others.
Summer
passed, and I kept teaching. I never went back to work. Then I wrote a
book about finding what you want to do, as told through my zig-zag
journey. Now I teach nationally on using yoga as a tool to find balance,
direction, and fulfillment. Every day isn't perfect. But there's a
deep-seated contentedness when you're doing what you're meant to do, and
I wouldn't trade it for anything.



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