HomeHealthNHS cancer screening reporting errors led to mother’s death

NHS cancer screening reporting errors led to mother’s death

Rob Sissons

BBC News, East Midlands health correspondent


Family handout Louise Gleadell pictured before the severity of her cancer illness took hold.
Family handout

Louise Gleadell died aged 38 from cervical cancer after being wrongly told her tests were negative in both 2008 and 2012

The family of a mother who died from cervical cancer after twice being wrongly told she had negative results have been awarded undisclosed damages.

The misreporting of Louise Gleadell’s cervical screening results was admitted by University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust following her death aged 38 in March 2018.

An internal review in 2017 found the samples, taken four years apart, were not good enough to produce reliable results but neither Ms Gleadell – a mum to three boys – nor her relatives were told about the “inadequate” samples while she was still alive.

Her family have now been given an undisclosed payout, with the trust apologising for its mistakes that had “devastating consequences”.