Scottish
Health Secretary Jeane Freeman confirmed a post-mortem examination carried out
on the youngster showed the Cryptococcus bacteria was a contributory factor in
their death.
An
earlier patient at Glasgow's Queen Elizabeth University Hospital was also found
to have an infection caused by inhaling the fungus Cryptococcus, which is
primarily found in soil and pigeon droppings, but Ms Freeman confirmed it did
not contribute to their death.
A
review will be carried out at Scotland's flagship hospital after it emerged one
of the two patients who died there after contracting an infection linked to
pigeon droppings was a child.
Pigeon
droppings appeared in a plant room on the hospital's rooftop via a small break
in the wall, which was "invisible to the naked eye", Ms Freeman said.
Adding
it was still unclear how the bacteria had entered the ventilation system, she
said a review would be carried out in the design, build, handover and
maintenance of the flagship hospital.
It
was built for the Scottish Government at a cost of some £842 million and opened
at the end of April 2015.
Despite
the hospital having only recently been constructed, Ms Freeman said there
appeared to be a "number of instances" where the fabric of building
was "less than satisfactory".
After
visiting the hospital on Tuesday morning, the Health Secretary said: "I
have agreed a review, with external expert advice, that will look at the design
of the building, the commissioning of the work, the construction of the
building, the handover of the building and the maintenance of the building, in
order to ensure we identify where issues were raised that should have been
addressed and where maintenance programmes now should be perhaps more robust or
more frequent."
Ms
Freeman announced the review after setting out "clear factual points"
on the two patient deaths to MSPs at Holyrood.
She
said the Cryptococcus bacteria had initially been identified in one patient in
November 2018 but was not linked to that person's death the following month.
Ms
Freeman added: "In December a post-mortem of a child who has passed away
conformed that Cryptococcus was both present and a contributory factor in their
death."
She
explained the second case triggered the introduction of additional infection
control measures by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, including prescribing
anti-fungal medication to "vulnerable patients" and the provision of
additional air filters.
"I
am confident the board have taken all the steps they should to ensure and
maintain patient safety," she said.
The
UK's Healthcare Environment Inspectorate will review the incident and make any recommendations
deemed appropriate.
Labour
health spokeswoman Monica Lennon said the public would be "shocked"
to learn one of those who had died was a child as she claimed there had been a
"complete lack of clarity" from the health board about the infection.
Ms
Lennon said: "I think the people of Scotland will feel it is absolutely
extraordinary that in a modern hospital, Scotland's flagship and apparently
super hospital no less, we have a situation where pigeons and infections can
kill patients.
"If
this unthinkable and deadly infection can happen at the flagship Queen
Elizabeth, what is to stop it happening at other hospitals?"
The
Labour MSP pressed Ms Freeman on when the Scottish Government had been alerted
to the issue, after reports an outpatient had contacted previous health
secretary Shona Robison in March 2018 regarding problems with pigeons at the
hospital.
Ms
Freeman said a thorough search of records by both the Government and staff at
Ms Robison's constituency office had found no trace of this letter.
The
Health Secretary said: "The Government was first informed of the
Cryptococcus infection in two patients on December 21.
"That
was the right time for the Government to be informed because it was the
post-mortem following the death of the child that identified the second case,
and that second case is the trigger then for additional infection control
action, therefore we were rightly informed."
Following
the hospital visit Ms Freeman said she had been made aware of a further two
fungal infections in patients, though neither are connected to the Cryptococcus
infection.
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