Zoe McGroarty was told she might have ‘flu’ or a strain from holding her new baby
A new mum claims doctors ‘fobbed off’ her agony as ‘strain’ from holding her baby – only to discover it was actually deadly blood clots. Zoe McGroarty gave birth to little Daisy McGroarty on April 13, 2023, who weighed in at 7 lbs 11oz. Two days after haemorrhaging in the delivery room, the mum-of-two said she began to feel an ‘icy blast’ radiating through her body.
The 32-year-old claims a doctor initially said she had flu before she was hospitalised with sepsis. Two days after being discharged from hospital, when Zoe started suffering with shoulder pain, she called her GP practice and claims a doctor over the phone told her it was a ‘strain’ from holding her newborn.
An in-person GP appointment saw the full-time mum diagnosed with sepsis-induced blood clots and rushed to hospital where six DVTs were found in her right arm. Now Zoe, who says she will have to take blood thinners for life, says she won’t have any more children as the post-birth experience ‘terrorised’ her.
Zoe, who lives near Bath, said: “Having any more children is out of the question, not because I don’t want any more children, but after what I went through, it’s terrorised me. The first symptom I developed was an icy cold blast and it just radiated through my body. My gut instinct was something was wrong and I thought it could be an infection.
“I rang the doctor and told them I had just given birth and didn’t feel very good. I spoke to the GP on the phone and she didn’t hear me. She said I probably just had the flu and told me the midwife was coming today and they would deal with it. I was shocked that she dismissed it without hearing me out.
“Throughout the week my midwife rang me to check in on how I was feeling. I was so breathless and I couldn’t walk as I had to keep sitting down. I felt so lightheaded and at that point I was starting to feel a bit disorientated and detached from reality.
“The [shoulder] pain started a couple of days after being discharged from hospital after having sepsis. It was the worst pain I had ever felt, I could barely move my shoulder. I phoned the GP and they told me it was a strain from holding the baby. They said I’d not long had sepsis and sometimes sepsis can cause you to have pain. I thought nothing of it and then the pain got worse.”
It was only after an in-person GP appointment that the true culprit was revealed – six DVTs in her right arm. Zoe said: “I rang the doctors again [after the call] and they gave me a face-to-face appointment. By this point my collarbone had disappeared from the swelling and I was in tears because it hurt that much. The GP then phoned the hospital as she thought I had a blood clot.”
Following her experience, Zoe is urging women to trust their gut if they think something is wrong as she claims her sepsis, and subsequent DVTs, could have been diagnosed sooner. Zoe said: “It has left me very anxious and with health anxiety as I worry about more blood clots. It traumatised me and I wouldn’t do it [have another child] again. The GP definitely could have caught it [sepsis] sooner. They completely fobbed me off [and said it was the flu].
“I’ve lost quite a lot of trust in doctors, I would tell people to trust their gut. Sepsis can mimic the flu but it makes you feel a million times worse and if they hadn’t had caught it, it could have been a very different story. It’s frightening to think it could have ended up so differently, I’m grateful to be alive. After giving birth, from my first symptom, I knew something wasn’t right. I knew it was something more severe than the flu.”
A Bath and North East Somerset, Swindon and Wiltshire Integrated Care Board spokesperson said: “We cannot comment on the details of individual patient experiences, but we expect all practices across Bath and North East Somerset, Swindon and Wiltshire to provide safe and high-quality care. When concerns are raised directly with a practice or through the appropriate NHS processes, they are reviewed in line with established procedures.
“As this relates to personal medical information, we are unable to provide further comment.”



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