After a surgery removing stints in an attempt to relieve pressure after a long battle with illness. Physicians forget to monitor a young woman’s head pressure leading to her death.

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Around the Fresno area, she was something of a minor celebrity, a buoyant teen beating the odds against a rare illness.  Brittany Wilkinson pushed hard to raise awareness of mitochondrial myopathy, a disorder that left her largely confined to a wheelchair.  She helped raise money for a cure and even received a proclamation from the Governor for her efforts.

But her life of promise ended around her 18th birthday, when Brittany went to Children’s hospital Central California for a procedure test whether doctors should remove two shunts implanted to drain fluid in her skull that caused bad headaches.

The plan was to plug one shunt and then monitor the pressure in her skull.  But right after the procedure, Brittany began experiencing horrific pain.  As she lay writhing in her hospital bed, clutching her head in agony, she told her mom the pain was so bad she no longer wanted to live.  By morning, she was showing symptoms of neurological injury.

But her doctor was at a barbecue that day and did not check up on Brittany.  By 5 pm, it was too late to save her.

The young woman sat up in bed, screamed and lost consciousness.  It was only then the hospital staff realized the monitor to gauge cranial pressure was disconnected.  The pressure in Brittany’s head was so extreme it pushed her brain stem through the base of her skull.

When her family sought answers, they learned about the state’s $250,000 MICRA cap on non-economic damages for medical malpractice.  Undeterred, Brittany’s parents pushed for a trial to hold the hospital accountable for the preventable death of their daughter.

Ultimately, the hospital and doctor settled rather than go to trial.  For Brittany’s family, it’s not about the money.  It’s about preventing the hospital’s callous disregard for its patients from happening again.

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