The family of Aoife Johnston, a 16-year-old who tragically passed away at University Hospital Limerick in December 2022, is urgently calling for the release of a detailed report concerning her demise. Aoife, a Shannon native, succumbed to meningitis complications following a mismanaged sepsis suspicion in the hospital’s overwhelmed emergency unit, where she was left untreated for over 12 hours.
Despite the conclusion of the investigation into her death two months ago, led by former Chief Justice Frank Clarke, the Johnston family is deeply dissatisfied. They allege that the Health Service Executive (HSE) has once again let them down by providing a report they consider “utterly superficial”. Their solicitor, Damien Tansey, voiced these concerns on RTÉ’s Drivetime, suggesting significant limitations were placed on Justice Clarke, impeding his ability to fully ascertain the facts or make conclusive findings.
The family’s grievances are twofold: the substandard care Aoife received at what is deemed a regional excellence center and the perceived shortcomings of the Clarke investigation. They anticipated that the investigation would address discrepancies and make definitive adverse findings. In a bold move, they’ve threatened to publicly release the report themselves unless the HSE takes immediate action to disclose it without redactions.
The call for transparency has been echoed by the Irish Hospital Consultants’ Association, advocating for the report’s publication to facilitate further processes, whether legal or procedural. This insistence comes amid whispers of possible disciplinary actions against senior figures at the University of Limerick Hospital Group, a prospect that solicitor Tansey insists should not prevent the report’s release.
Amidst this turmoil, both Taoiseach Simon Harris and Health Minister Stephen Donnelly have been apprised of the ongoing situation, having previously met with Aoife’s parents and expressed concern over her case, which continues to resonate with the public.
The HSE and the University of Limerick Hospital Group have publicly apologized to Aoife’s family, expressing deep regret for the circumstances leading to her untimely death. HSE CEO Bernard Gloster has communicated a commitment to publish the Clarke report in a “responsible and lawful format” later this month, considering the privacy and sensitivity of the data involved.
While the HSE urges restraint in the report’s premature release, promising ongoing dialogue, the Johnston family remains steadfast in their demand for immediate action, reflecting a broader call for accountability and transparency within the healthcare system.