Lucy Letby: Murder-accused nurse ‘tried to kill girl hours after making a banner celebrating baby’s 100th day’

The infant’s parents joined in the celebrations, Manchester Crown Court heard
Court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of Lucy Letby
PA Wire
Robert Dex @RobDexES1 December 2022

Lucy Letby tried to kill a baby hours after she helped make a banner to mark the girl becoming 100 days old, a court heard.

The youngster reached the milestone after she was born “very, very prematurely”, weighing only 535 grams.

Doctors at Wirral’s Arrowe Park Hospital gave the girl a 5% chance of survival but she stabilised and months later was well enough to be transferred to the Countess of Chester Hospital.

Weeks later, on the evening of September 6 2015, nursing staff on the neonatal unit, including Letby, put up a party banner in celebration of the baby’s 100th day of life.

The infant’s parents joined in the celebrations as a cake was brought into the unit, Manchester Crown Court heard.

They later went home but received a call in the early hours of the next morning to say their daughter had vomited.

Medics noted the baby, referred to as Child G, had projectile vomited at about 2am and her abdomen appeared “purple and distended”.

Her oxygen levels dropped and she stopped breathing several times over the next few hours before she responded to breathing support on ventilation.

The Crown says Letby overfed Child G with milk through a nasogastric tube or injected air into the same tube.

On the afternoon of September 7 she messaged an on-duty colleague, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, to ask if Child G was going to be transferred from the Countess of Chester.

The colleague said the girl was “improving a bit now” but noted that her leg and arm “both went white”.

Letby replied: “Not well at all, is she. Poor parents.”

She later messaged: “How are parents?”

The colleague said: “Devastated but determined she’ll get through ‘as always’. Thought that if she got to 100 then they would feel confident she’d be fine.”

Letby said: “Awful isn’t it. We’d all been sat at desk at start of the shift making banner.”

The court heard Letby visited the unit briefly later that evening and later messaged her colleague - who had finished her shift - saying: “She looks awful doesn’t she.”

Her colleague replied: “Yeah. Going to APH (Arrowe Park Hospital) ...So no better. Damn. I have a bad feeling. At least they know APH.”

Letby said: “Not looking good but yes least going to where she is known. Just hope they get here there.”

Child G was transferred at 3am on September 8 to Arrowe Park, where she recovered and was moved back to the Countess of Chester more than a week later, the court heard.

The Crown says Letby made two more attempts to murder Child G on September 2 and jurors were told Child G now has quadriplegic cerebral palsy and requires round-the-clock care.

In a statement read to the court, Child G’s mother recalled an occasion when Letby told her to wait in the parents’ room while she took her daughter’s bloods.

She left for a coffee, she said, but decided to return early and was greeted by her daughter “freaking out and screaming”.

The mother said: “She (Child G) looked so puzzled. Lucy was with another member of staff, trying to calm her down. They let me hold her in the end because that is what calmed her down - cuddles.”

Child G’s father said he and his wife noticed “something had changed” after the vomiting incident.

He said: “When she was in the incubator at the Countess before the vomit, I would speak to her and she would smile react to my voice. Once she had vomited she seemed different and didn’t respond to my voice any more.”

Child G was discharged in November 2015 but a MRI scan at the age of two-and-half-years old showed the “true extent of her brain damage”, he said.

He said Child G is also visually impaired and her life expectancy is not known.

Letby, originally from Hereford, denies murdering seven babies and the attempted murders of 10 others between June 2015 and June 2016.

The trial continues on Friday.

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