'My children never saw their father again after he went into hospital': Family settles action over death of father at CUH

Patrick Connolly. Picture via RIP.ie
“We are still heartbroken; I feel let down; I put all my trust in them.”
These are the words of Tipperary widow, Geraldine Connolly as she settled for €600,000 a High Court action against the HSE over the death of her husband at Cork University Hospital five days after he had been airlifted there after a traffic incident.
A significant small bowel injury was missed completely the High Court heard and father-of-five, 51-year-old Patrick Connolly deteriorated gradually and died of a heart attack in CUH five days after the road accident outside Tipperary town on December 28, 2021.
She said Patrick was the love of her life and they had been together nearly thirty years.
“On New Year’s Eve in the hospital I said he wasn’t himself; he was out of it and they put it down to the morphine he was on for pain. You trust them; you think they are doing their best and it was after all that, everything happened."
She added: “You expect better care.”
The family’s counsel Dr John O’Mahony SC with Cian O’Mahony BL told the court in hospital “no particular attention was paid to the bowel injury and Mr Connolly gradually deteriorated”.
Counsel said Mr Connolly was in a lot of pain and vomiting and had two heart attacks but died after the second one on January 2, 2022.
The HSE has admitted that Mr Connolly had a small bowel perforation that was not diagnosed in a timely manner. It was also admitted that had a laparoscopic assessment been carried out at any time from Mr Connolly’s admission on December 28, 2021 to CUH to the time of his first heart attack on January 1, 2022, there would have been a high likelihood of survival.
Counsel said it was their case that Mr Connolly had sustained “survivable injuries” in the accident as he took part in a bike charity event with his son. The family, he said, had suffered a dreadful loss.
He said there had been a collision with a car driven by a Mary Lowry as Mr Connolly drove his motorbike with his son as a pillion passenger.
A central witness in the Mr Moonlight murder trial, Ms Lowry was last year given a suspended one-year jail sentence and a one-year driving ban, after she admitted a charge of careless driving in relation to the incident.
Mary Lowry, aged 57, Green Road, Dundrum, Co Tipperary admitted driving her car without due care or attention on the N24 Waterford to Limerick road, close to an entrance to Bansha Woods, Spring House, Bansha, around 12.45pm, on December 28, 2021.
She was not a party to the High Court proceedings.
Mr Connolly’s widow, Geraldine Connolly, Burncourt, Cahir, Co Tipperary, on behalf of her family, had sued the HSE over the death of her husband.
Outside court, Geraldine Connolly said her husband was a good man and a great father.
Referring to the car driver Mary Lowry, Mrs Connolly said it was an accident and “Paddy would never have held it against Mary Lowry. He was like that; he would have understood”.
In the proceedings it was claimed that Mr Connolly who had suffered pelvic and other injuries complained of abdominal pain. Tests were carried out and it was noted Mr Connolly had suffered abdominal trauma and required observation due to risk of bowel injury.
Blood tests and other examinations were carried out and Mr Connolly remained unwell.
On December 31, Mr Connolly’s condition further deteriorated and he was acutely unwell. The next day in January 1, 2022 a review was carried out because of Mr Connolly’s temperature spike and pain. It was noted nothing was improving his pain. Mr Connolly later suffered a heart attack and he was resuscitated.
He remained very unstable the next day in January, he suffered a further cardiac arrest and he died.
Approving the settlement against the HSE in the High Court and the division of the €35,000 statutory mental distress payment, Mr Justice Paul Coffey said it was a sad and tragic case. He extended his sympathy to the Connolly family.