75564478


News


A British mother died of stage IV cervical cancer after her doctors revealed an abnormal Pap smear and biopsy.

Kerry Pugh, 48, passed away in June 2022 after being told her results came back normal, although she was still bleeding.

Her husband, Steven, said: “I can’t begin to describe the stress and exhaustion Keri must have gone through.” According to the BBC. “She was a beautiful and caring person and a great mother. It was heartbreaking to watch her health deteriorate as the cancer took hold.

The mother of three children She was checked in 2017 after she started bleeding after sex and had a ten-year history of abnormal cells on her cervix, the BBC reported.

In the year In 2018, she received a routine Pap smear, but after her death in June 2022, the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital audited her papers and discovered that this was not the case.

Doctors at the hospital couldn’t find the exact cause of her bleeding a year ago, but she was diagnosed with high-risk HPV and later underwent a biopsy and had pain at the base of her spine.

Kerry Pugh, 48, was diagnosed around 2017 after she started bleeding after sex and has a decade-long history of abnormal cells on her cervix. Irwin Mitchell / SWNS
In the year In 2018, she received a routine Pap smear, but after her death in June 2022, the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital audited her papers and discovered that this was not the case. Irwin Mitchell / SWNS

She was diagnosed with stage IV cancer and an MRI scan revealed a tumor the size of a tennis ball.

She underwent surgery and began radiation and chemotherapy, but later succumbed to the disease in June 2022.

A post-mortem audit revealed that her cervical cancer test had come back with signs of extensive cell change.

This prompted her husband to hire medical malpractice attorney Irwin Mitchell to see if the hospital could have diagnosed her cancer sooner.

The doctors of the hospital could not find the exact cause of her bleeding a year ago. Irwin Mitchell / SWNS
Months later, the bleeding worsened and she began to experience pain in her coccyx. Irwin Mitchell / SWNS

Steven is considering taking legal action and now urges women to be aware of the symptoms of cervical cancer, which is often in its late stages.

He said his wife always put her family first despite her illness and that she was “everything to me and we all miss her every day.”

Pugh leaves behind three children, Morgan, 24; Lily, 14; and Freddie, 11; As reported by The Sun.

The hospital and Telford Hospital NHS Trust – which helped with the audit – offered their condolences to the family.

“We will continue to support Mr. Pugh with any questions regarding his wife’s care,” said Dr. John Jones, the medical director, in a statement.




Click more…









Copy the URL to share