Husband told op was routine
THE wife of a man who died after an operation was shocked to hear her husband would still be here if he had not had the procedure.
Sylvia Gilson, from Chulmleigh, heard at an inquest that her husband Alden died from an infection he contracted after an operation at North Devon District Hospital.
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North Devon District Hospital
Mr Gilson had been in to have a colostomy bag removed, which Mrs Gilson says was described to her as a 'routine' operation.
However Mr Gilson contracted clostridium difficile after the operation and was put on life support in the intensive care unit a few days later.
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His condition did not improve and he died on August 11 last year.
Mrs Gilson said: "Although we always knew that Alden was feeling fit and well and was very active prior to his planned operation to reverse his stoma, it was still a shock to hear the consultant say at the inquest that had he not carried out the operation, Alden would be with us today with a prognosis of five years."
The surgeon who carried out Mr Gilson's operation claimed he was put under pressure by his patient to remove the colostomy bag, which Mrs Gilson says was not the case.
"I was disappointed to hear him say that he only carried out the operation because he was under pressure from my husband to do so," she said.
"It's true that Alden had always wanted a reversal because he had been told that the stoma was a temporary measure and could easily be reversed.
"The consultant's statement gave the impression that my husband was hurrying the surgeon to operate as soon as possible but this was not the case."
Mrs Gilson said her husband was a member of the committee that organises Chulmleigh Old Fair, which he was due to open before his death, and that he had been told the operation was routine and he would only be in hospital for a week.
Coroner Dr Elizabeth Earland recorded a verdict of misadventure at the recent inquest, and gave the cause of death as renal failure and the infection Mr Gilson contracted after the operation.




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