BBC News, Nottingham
A mother has heard of 999 to help 999 before she was found dead with her disabled daughter in her house.
The bodies of Alphonsin Djiako Leuga, 47, and 18 -year -old Lorine Cholla were found on 21 May 2024 in a house in Redford, Nottingham, after raising concerns about their welfare.
It was believed that he was ignored for “weeks or months”.
An inquiry about his deaths starting on Monday, Alphonsin asked for an ambulance on 2 February, stating that he was cold and could not move forward, but no one participated.
An inquiry is expected in the Nottingham Coronor Court under the leadership of Assistant Coronor Amanda Baywale.
The medical cause of alphonsin’s death was proposed as pneumonia, while his daughter was “unheard”, a pathologist Dr. Stuart Hamilton said in evidence.
The inquiry heard Lorin, who had down syndrome and learning inability to have “completely dependent” on his mother.
Dr. Hamilton said that he could die Alphonsin on 2 February, when he called 999, “Alphonsin could die.”
Alphonsin was admitted to the city hospital on 26 January with a low respiratory tract infection and required blood transfusion due to low iron levels.
He was asked to stay in the hospital, despite, he was “practically discharged” on 28 January to return to his daughter “.
It agreed that she would return the next day, but she did not return, and the hospital and her GP were unable to contact her.
On 2 February, Alphonsin asked for an ambulance on 999, listening to the inquiry.
He told a call handler that he needed help for himself and his daughter.
“I feel cold and I can’t move forward,” she told the call handler.
‘Missed opportunity’
In a transcript read in the inquiry, the call handler asked several times what the language Alphonsin spoke and whether it needs a interpreter.
Despite not answering those questions, he gave his address and asked for an ambulance again.
“Will you send an ambulance? Please, please,” were the last words on the phone before the call was finished.
Giving evidence, Susan Jevones, head of a paramedic and coroners service at the East Midlands Ambulance Service (EMAS), stated that an attempt was made to recall Alphonsein without any answer.
“The ambulance did not go to the address because the emergency medical advisor, thinking that it was an abandoned call, shut down the call,” said Mrs. Jens.
He said that “never this should happen” because he had a description of his address, telephone number and its symptoms.
An internal investigation found that there was an “missed opportunity” for an ambulance that was to participate in the alphonsein of the day.
Mrs. Javens apologized for “all errors” from EMAS.
The inquiry, who will investigate how the mother and daughter died, will also investigate whether Alphonsein died in front of her daughter and if she had done, would there be any missing opportunities to save Lorin.
Lorin weighs 59 kg at the point of a post mortem examination.
His weight was recorded in medical records as 108 kg a year ago on 24 February, listened to the inquiry.
Pathologist, Dr. Hamilton said the teenager’s stomach and bladder were empty after the post -mortem examination.
Asked whether Lorin’s death can be caused by malnutrition or dehydration, Dr. Hamilton said that “nothing was nothing” [his] Any of them will be wrong “.
The inquiry is going on.
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