Dad Whose Daughter Died From Sepsis Is Raising Awareness In Her Memory

'Pippa went in to hospital at 7pm and she died by 4am.'

A dad whose daughter died from blood poisoning when she was just three years old is encouraging other parents to ask the question: “Could it be sepsis?”

Peter Howarth, 45, from Manchester, said his daughter Pippa began feeling under the weather at the beginning of April 2014.

A few days later, she was taken to hospital and diagnosed with pneumonia. At no point did the dad suspect that, within a matter of hours, she would die from sepsis.

“What people don’t know about sepsis is the speed and how quickly it changes a life,” Howarth, who is a dad-of-three, told HuffPost UK.

“Pippa went in at 7pm and she died by 4am. That’s how quickly it takes a life.”

Pippa with her older brother Aubrey, five at the time, and her baby brother Elliott, who was born on 31 March 2014. She died on 10 April 2014.
PeterHowarth
Pippa with her older brother Aubrey, five at the time, and her baby brother Elliott, who was born on 31 March 2014. She died on 10 April 2014.

Sepsis, also known as blood poisoning, is a reaction to an infection in which the body attacks its own organs and tissues, according to the Sepsis Trust.

It develops when the chemicals released into the bloodstream by the immune system to fight the infection cause inflammation throughout the body instead.

Howarth’s daughter fell ill shortly after his second son was born on 31 March 2014. He described Pippa as a “robust” three-year-old, who rarely seemed to get ill. At the beginning of April, she went down with what the family thought was a cold.

She had a high temperature and was a bit “lethargic”.

“It was genuinely no more sinister than that,” said Howarth.

Howarth and Pippa’s mother gave her Calpol every few hours. She was unwell for a few days - with no vomiting or diarrhoea, but then one evening, Howarth’s now ex-wife was concerned her breathing wasn’t quite right.

The couple called the NHS helpline who sent round an ambulance. They gave Pippa an oxygen mask to help her breathe and decided to take her in for tests.

At the hospital, they found out she had fluid on her lungs and she was diagnosed with pneumonia. There was no mention of sepsis.

Pippa was put on antibiotics and Howarth stayed with her at the hospital overnight, while her mother went home to look after their newborn.

“I was there at 10pm and she was wired up to drips, but still demanding pink drinks and a story,” Howarth said. “She was bossing me around, she was perky.

“It got to 3am and I thought she wasn’t right. She was talking, but it was nonsense and stopped making sense. I got the nurse to come in.

“They checked on her and there was no mention of sepsis, then off they went.

“I sat with her half an hour after this point in the room, just holding her hand. I was holding her hand when she stopped breathing. That was it.

“I was hustled out, the crash teams came in. She died before my wife got there. After about 20 minutes I was allowed back in the room, and that’s when my life changed.”

Pippa was being treated for pneumonia, but she died from sepsis.

Peter Howarth.
PeterHowarth
Peter Howarth.

“Sepsis - I didn’t hear that word until she had died,” Howarth said. “We didn’t get a chance to fight, she was gone before we could try. We didn’t have a chance, she didn’t have a chance. It was a flick of a switch and she was gone.”

Howarth wants people to understand the speed at which sepsis acts, adding: “It happened so quick, people just don’t think about it.

“It ruins your life. Everybody blames themselves when a child dies but with this disease, you don’t have a chance unless you spot it early.

“You can’t always spot the symptoms. I don’t know if we ever could have stopped it, unless we said: ‘Could it be sepsis?’”

Howarth’s message to parents is exactly that: To ask medical experts if they are worried about their child: “Could it be sepsis?”

Despite being a life-threatening illness, if caught early (before it has affected any vital organs) it is possible to treat sepsis with antibiotics. Most people who have it detected at an early stage are able to make a full recovery, according to the NHS.

“It may not have changed the outcome with us,” Howarth said. “We might have been unlucky, but maybe - if someone had asked - just maybe, we’d still have her.

“If by doing any type of awareness raising I can help one person ask the question and save one life, that’s one family that doesn’t have to go through the hell we’ve had to go through.

“Sepsis kills quickly. It’s the speed it kills that people need to know about.”

Howarth’s way of coping with his grief was to take on “stupid activities”. He ran the London marathon in 2015 for Child Bereavement UK and raised nearly £9,000.

So what does Howarth want for the future of sepsis research?

“I’d love to say let’s do with sepsis what we did with ebola and try to fight it,” he said. “Depending on what you believe, it does affect every community.

“Surely someone somewhere has got to accept that there needs to be research done to tackle what treatment there could be, or even a pin prick test? This could help people work it out early.”

Sending a final message to parents, Howarth said: “It’s life-changing to have to cope with a loss of a child. It affects everything.

“Tell your child you love them every day and cuddle your children while you still can.”

Spotting sepsis in children under five:

Source: NHS Choices.

Go straight to A&E or call 999 if your child has any of these symptoms:

  • looks mottled, bluish or pale
  • is very lethargic or difficult to wake
  • feels abnormally cold to touch
  • is breathing very fast
  • has a rash that does not fade when you press it
  • has a fit or convulsion.

If your child has any of the symptoms listed below, seek medical advice urgently from NHS 111.

Temperature:

  • over 38C in babies under three months
  • over 39C in babies aged three to six months
  • any high temperature in a child who cannot be encouraged to show interest in anything
  • below 36C – check three times in a 10-minute period.

Breathing:

  • finding it much harder to breathe than normal – looks like hard work
  • making “grunting” noises with every breath
  • can’t say more than a few words at once (for older children who normally talk)
  • breathing that obviously “pauses”.

Toilet/Nappies:

  • not had a wee or wet nappy for 12 hours.

Eating And Drinking:

  • new baby under one month old with no interest in feeding
  • not drinking for more than eight hours (when awake)
  • bile-stained (green), bloody or black vomit/sick.

Activity And Body:

  • soft spot on a baby’s head is bulging
  • eyes look “sunken”
  • child cannot be encouraged to show interest in anything
  • baby is floppy
  • weak, “whining” or continuous crying in a younger child
  • older child who’s confused
  • not responding or very irritable
  • stiff neck, especially when trying to look up and down.

For more information on sepsis, visit www.sepsistrust.org.

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