Last updated at 16:43 17 September 2007

A woman who had complained to her GP of severe headaches for almost a year collapsed and died of an undiagnosed brain tumour.

Jennifer Bell, 22, had been told she was suffering from stress but after months of illness had finally been referred to a neurologist.

She then faced a 13-week wait before a 'relatively urgent' MRI scan could be carried out.

Three days before the longawaited appointment she collapsed at home and died later in hospital.

Her parents, Colin and Joyce Bell, want to know why Jennifer's MRI referral was logged only as 'relatively urgent'.

Yesterday at an inquest in Norwich, Coroner William Armstrong agreed that an early scan would have led to much faster intervention.

Jennifer, of Thorpe End, Norwich, developed severe headaches, nausea, a stiff neck and diarrhoea in August 2005.

Her health became so poor she gave up her job as a passenger service agent at Norwich airport.

She visited her GP for the first time on November 4, 2005.

Between then and April 10, 2006, she had five GP appointments. She also had six physiotherapy sessions.

Her GP, Dr Helene Barclay, of Thorpe Medical Group, had recorded her symptoms as stressrelated.

But eight months on and still no better, Jennifer was referred to the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital.

There a neurologist discovered that her periods had stopped, a symptom not usually associated with headaches and decided she needed a scan.

But on July 3 last year - only three days before her appointment, Miss Bell collapsed at home.

She was taken to the N&N hospital and then transferred to Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, where she died.

At the inquest, Dr Barclay defended her decision to prescribe painkillers and physiotherapy for Miss Bell's stiff neck.

"She did not show any sensory symptoms and I feel the routine referral to the N&N was appropriate," she said.

Dr Jeffrey Cochius, consultant neurologist and clinical director at the N&N, said it was a credit to the neurologist who had referred Jennifer for the MRI as many would not have asked questions about her menstruation.

Coroner Mr Armstrong recorded a narrative verdict, saying: "I think there is no doubt that the tumour caused her death but it is also quite clear that early detection would have resulted in medical intervention of some kind.

"The expression 'relatively urgent' is inherently ambiguous and the hospital might consider whether its use is helpful or appropriate.

"Jennifer died as a consequence of a progressive undiagnosed brain tumour of a rare type and location

urgent is a dangerous term because it is a contradiction."