Thompson v HM Assistant Coroner for Durham [2015] EWHC 1781 (Admin)
Kristian Thompson was 19 years old when he died. He was a detained patient in a hospital secure unit under s.3 Mental Health Act. On the day of his death he had suffered an episode of incontinence and went to shower. He was found in the shower, collapsed on the floor with the shower running. He did not recover.
At the inquest in November 2012 the assistant coroner returned an open verdict, recording the medical cause of death as “unascertained“. The pathologist and consultant neuro-pathologist involved in the post-mortem and the consultant physician who had been involved in Kristian’s treatment post-collapse considered two possible causes of death (sudden and unexpected death in epilepsy (‘SUDEP’) and sudden adult death syndrome (‘SADS’). In the absence of an ante-mortem diagnosis of epilepsy the doctors were unable to come to any probable conclusion. However, the pathologist stated that he would alter his opinion on the cause of death if an expert clinician could diagnose epilepsy at any time.
There had been insufficiency of inquiry such that it was necessary and desirable in the interests of justice to hold a fresh inquest.