A tragic incident occurred during a home birth that resulted in the deaths of a mother and her newborn due to what a coroner described as “neglect,” “catastrophic error,” and “gross failures to provide basic care.” Jennifer Cahill, aged 34, passed away in a hospital on June 3, 2024, one day after delivering her second child, Agnes, at their residence in Prestwich, Bury, Greater Manchester, where they lived with her husband, Robert Cahill. Sadly, baby Agnes also succumbed in the hospital just four days later.
Following a two-week inquest into their deaths, the coroner concluded that the family had experienced a tragedy reminiscent of the Victorian era unfolding in the present day. Both Jennifer and Agnes faced various complications during birth, leading to their separate hospitalizations. Agnes was born without breathing, with the umbilical cord wrapped around her neck, while Jennifer started losing a significant amount of blood shortly after. The cause of Jennifer’s death was determined as multi-organ failure due to cardiac arrest resulting from postpartum hemorrhage, while Agnes passed away from multi-organ failure due to hypoxia after umbilical cord compression.
During the hearing at Rochdale Coroners’ Court, Coroner Joanne Kearsley highlighted “gross failures” in providing adequate care during Jennifer’s antenatal care and the delivery process for both Jennifer and Agnes. She pointed out a critical oversight where an essential document, an out-of-guidance birth plan, was never completed despite Jennifer’s decision to have a home birth. This plan could have helped assess the risks involved, identify potential hazards, and understand Jennifer’s choice of a home birth better.
Ms. Kearsley criticized the antenatal care received by Jennifer as lacking depth, being assumption-based, and perfunctory. She also emphasized the failure to conduct heart rate checks on Agnes every five minutes as Jennifer’s labor progressed, which would have alerted midwives to Agnes struggling for air due to the cord being wrapped around her neck for an extended period before birth. Neglect was identified as a contributing factor in the tragic deaths of both Agnes and Jennifer.
