Disabled opera singer awarded €2.3m in damages

AN AWARD-WINNING opera singer who is severely disabled after a hospital and a GP failed to properly diagnose the cause of her…

AN AWARD-WINNING opera singer who is severely disabled after a hospital and a GP failed to properly diagnose the cause of her headaches has been awarded €2.39 million in an interim damages settlement at the High Court.

Elaine Lennon (36) can now only speak in a whisper, is wheel-chair bound and will require 24-hour care for the rest of her life because doctors failed to diagnose an infection in her brain, the court was told.

She would have been fine if a CT scan of her brain had been carried out in time, it was claimed.

Ms Lennon was 39 weeks pregnant at the time of her injury, when she almost died, but she later gave birth to a baby girl, Claudia, who is healthy and doing fine, the court also heard.

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Were it not for her injuries, Ms Lennon could have gone on to make a lot of money as a singer and a psychologist as she was conferred with a master’s degree in psychology just a few months after her injury, Mr Justice John Quirke said when approving the interim settlement.

Suing through her father John Lennon, Ms Lennon, formerly of Newhaven Bay, Balbriggan, Co Dublin, brought the action against the HSE and Dr Patrick Mathuna, a GP at Castle Mill Medical Centre, Balbriggan. Liability was admitted by both defendants.

It was alleged she arrived at the accident and emergency unit of Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda, Co Louth, on February 4th, 2007, complaining of headaches.

She was diagnosed by a medical registrar as suffering from a urinary tract infection and dehydration, it was claimed. As she was pregnant, she was assessed by a midwife and later underwent a Caesarean section. Her baby was born late on February 4th.

She continued to complain of severe headaches, neck stiffness and was not responding to antibiotics, it was claimed. Doctors at the hospital twice queried whether she should have a CT scan of her brain but no scan was carried out and she was discharged on February 11th along with her baby, it was claimed.

She continued to suffer from headaches and was vomiting. She attended Dr Mathuna’s clinic on February 14th when she was given an injection which worked for around 24 hours, it was claimed.

Dr Mathuna called to her on February 17th and told her he believed she could be suffering from post-natal depression and exhaustion and prescribed a sedative, it was also claimed.

Later that day, she collapsed at home and was admitted by ambulance to the A and E unit.

Early the next day, she had two seizures. A CT scan was then carried out which revealed an abscess in her brain had burst into the ventricles.