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Thursday, July 24, 2025

NWRHA to pay woman $400,000 for giving her the wrong blood

by

Derek Achong
1455 days ago
20210729
Angela Badree, took the NWRHA to court in a wrong blood transfusion case.

Angela Badree, took the NWRHA to court in a wrong blood transfusion case.

Shirley Bahadur

The North West Re­gion­al Health Au­thor­i­ty (NWRHA) has been or­dered to pay a lit­tle over $400,000 in com­pen­sa­tion to a 72-year-old woman who had an ad­verse re­ac­tion af­ter be­ing giv­en the wrong type of blood dur­ing a rou­tine blood trans­fu­sion. 

High Court judge Joan Charles or­dered the com­pen­sa­tion for An­gela Badree, of Williamsville, af­ter up­hold­ing her med­ical neg­li­gence law­suit against the NWRHA on Wednes­day. 

Ac­cord­ing to the ev­i­dence in the case, on Feb­ru­ary 18, 2014, her physi­cian or­dered her to un­der­go a blood trans­fu­sion be­fore her surgery for a coro­nary artery by­pass graft. 

While un­der­go­ing the trans­fu­sion at the Port-of-Spain Gen­er­al Hos­pi­tal lat­er that day, Badree be­gan ex­pe­ri­enc­ing se­vere low­er back pain, shiv­er­ing, and gen­er­alised itch­ing. 

The trans­fu­sion was briefly stopped and Badree was ad­min­is­tered med­ica­tion be­fore it re­sumed. 

The trans­fu­sion had to be stopped once again as Badree com­plained about ex­treme chest pains and dif­fi­cul­ty breath­ing. 

Doc­tors at the hos­pi­tal at­tempt­ed to re­sume the trans­fu­sion the fol­low­ing day, but Badree’s symp­toms per­sist­ed. 

Badree’s doc­tor then ad­vised her to get a blood test from a pri­vate med­ical fa­cil­i­ty and re­turn with the re­sults. 

The tests re­vealed that she had been ad­min­is­tered B pos­i­tive blood when her blood type was A pos­i­tive. 

Her graft surgery had to be post­poned af­ter she was di­ag­nosed with Acute Haemolyt­ic Trans­fu­sion Re­ac­tion (AHTR). 

In the law­suit, Badree claimed that doc­tors and nurs­es at the pub­lic hos­pi­tal, which is op­er­at­ed by the NWRHA, were neg­li­gent in ad­min­is­ter­ing the wrong type of blood and in fail­ing to recog­nise the signs and symp­toms of her AHTR. 

In de­fence of the case, the NWRHA ad­mit­ted that Badree was ad­min­is­tered the wrong blood but de­nied that the er­ror caused her loss, dam­age, pain, and suf­fer­ing. It al­so claimed that she sub­se­quent­ly re­cov­ered. 

It al­so chal­lenged the find­ings of Badree’s med­ical ex­pert wit­ness Dr Ramesh Mathu­ra, who ruled that Badree was left 90 to 95 per cent per­ma­nent­ly par­tial­ly dis­abled be­cause of the er­ror. 

In her judge­ment, Jus­tice Charles not­ed that the NWRHA’s ex­pert wit­ness did not tes­ti­fy dur­ing the tri­al. 

“No med­ical ev­i­dence has been ad­duced by the de­fen­dant to chal­lenge the claimant’s as­ser­tion that her phys­i­cal con­di­tion has de­te­ri­o­rat­ed as a re­sult of the im­pugned blood trans­fu­sion,” Jus­tice Charles said. 

“The claimant on the oth­er hand has re­lied up­on the ex­pert ev­i­dence of Mathu­ra in sup­port of her con­tention that she has suf­fered in­jury ren­der­ing her un­able to walk un­aid­ed or to care for her­self as a re­sult of the said trans­fu­sion,” she added. 

Charles did note that she was con­cerned that Mathu­ra did not do a phys­i­cal ex­am­i­na­tion or sent her for fur­ther test­ing to ver­i­fy her symp­toms. 

“How­ev­er, he is an ex­pe­ri­enced haema­tol­o­gist and gave it as his opin­ion that the trans­fu­sion of the wrong blood type could cause these symp­toms,” she said. 

In as­sess­ing the com­pen­sa­tion for Badree, Charles not­ed that she did not ac­cept Mathu­ra’s find­ing on the ex­tent of her dis­abil­i­ty. 

“I am of the view that her per­ma­nent par­tial dis­abil­i­ty is at 50 per cent, giv­en the fact that she al­so suf­fers from coro­nary artery dis­ease and di­a­betes mel­li­tus,” Charles said, as she al­so con­sid­ered Badree’s age.  

Charles not­ed that al­though Badree claimed that be­fore the in­ci­dent, she would earn $1,000 month­ly by sell­ing pro­duce she grew, she did not pro­vide ev­i­dence of her loss of in­come. 

As part of her judg­ment, Charles al­so or­dered that the NWRHA pay her le­gal costs for bring­ing the law­suit. 

Badree was rep­re­sent­ed by Anand Ram­lo­gan, SC, Che Din­di­al and Vishaal Siewsaran. Justin Phelps and Charles Law rep­re­sent­ed the NWRHA. 


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