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The family of a woman who was killed by a flesh-eating virus has hit out at the hospital that sent her home with a 'sprained wrist'.

Katie Widdowson, 24, went to hospital in agonising pain after she hurt her left wrist on New Year's Day.

She had woken up that morning and had sex with her boyfriend Dean Smith, who had tied her up as part of a sex game.

Doctors initially dismissed her concerns, saying she had suffered a sprained wrist as a result of the game and sent her home with painkillers.

But the next day Katie was unable to move her arm which had turned black and blistered and she was rushed back to hospital.

Tragically, Katie suffered a heart attack in the ambulance and was pronounced dead shortly after arriving at hospital on January 2 this year.

An inquest heard she had contracted Necrotising Fasciitis - sometimes known as a flesh-eating virus.

(Image: SWNS)

The killer disease can be caused by a small cut on someone's skin which can quickly develop into a deadly bacteria.

An inquest into her death found medical staff at Good Hope Hospital in Sutton Coldfield, West Mids., failed to correctly diagnose her.

Assistant coroner Emma Brown said that she should have been kept in hospital and undergone major surgery.

She told Birmingham Coroner's Court: "They (the doctors) flagrantly ignored the policy that was there for the very situation Katie found herself in.

"Her early warning score was six and should have resulted in regular and ongoing observations and further investigations.

"These were not carried out. If Katie had remained in hospital, it is clear that her death would have been avoidable.

"These mistakes amounted to a gross failure to provide basic medical attention.

"Katie's death was due to Necrotising Fasciitis contributed to by neglect."

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Ms Brown said there may have been other explanations for her injuries but the most likely was when she was restrained.

Her devastated boyfriend Dean, 25, a chef, told the inquest he had tied Katie up during a sex game before her death.

He said: "I do not remember much about it. It's not anything we have ever done before."

Katie's mother, Patricia Widdowson said: They (Katie and Dean) had been at a New Year's Eve party until 5am on New Year's Day.

"They'd got home around 6am and they'd had sex and she was tied up. They were a loving couple and it's nobody's else's business what they did behind closed doors.

"Later that day Katie sent Dean a photo of her wrist saying it was hurting.

"The next night her arm looked horrific. Dean took a picture of it while the ambulance was on its way.

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"There is a black mark on the base of her thumb and we think that is where the injury started.

"I don't know what caused the injury but it doesn't matter because that was not what killed her.

"When she went into Good Hope Hospital on the 1st she had a MEWS (Modified Early Warning Score) of six which is a red flag for sepsis but this was ignored.

"The junior doctor had only been in the country for four months. She had come over from India. If they had treated Katie properly she would still be alive."

The inquest heard care assistant Katie lived with Dean in Castle Vale, Birmingham with their young son.

On January 1 she sent Dean a photograph of her injured wrist and said she was unable to move it so went to hospital.

But despite seeing two doctors and having an x-ray, she was told she had a sprained wrist, and was discharged. Tragically 24 hours later she was dead.

Her grieving mum, 54, from Telford, Shrops., slammed medical staff for failing to take her daughter's injuries more seriously.

The mum-of-three said: "I cannot imagine how scared she must have been that night.

"The inquest said there were three things that could have caused the death.

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"The first thing was it could have been caused by trauma to the wrist by falling on the stairs leading up to her flat.

"The next could have been a tiny cut from when she entertained the baby by diving into hedges and things like that.

"And the third thing was the sex game.

"I spoke to her on New Year's Day morning and she was fine.

"The next we knew or heard was a phone call at 9pm.

"She usually phoned every single day without fail and then we had a phone call to say she was in an ambulance have a cardiac arrest.

"It was awful. My first thought was just 'what has she done?'

"When she first went to the Good Hope Hospital at 11pm on New Year's Day complaining about her wrist she told the staff how much pain she was in.

"The pain was going all the way from her wrist to her left breast.

"Initially the nurse did what he was expected to do, he took her temperature, blood pressure and heart rate and everything was abnormal.

"He handed Katie over to one of the junior doctors and she made her observations but she said she had taken all the readings but not recorded them.

(Image: Birmingham Mail)

"She knew there was something a little bit amiss.

"She then went to the senior doctor because she thought Katie had Compartment Syndrome.

"Katie had an x-ray but the senior doctor just said it was a sprained wrist.

"Everything her body was screaming was not consistent with a sprained wrist.

"From what we can remember the senior doctor looked at her paperwork and said it was a sprained wrist.

"Because he saw her walking in looking OK I think he just assumed it was that.

"After that, Katie was supposed to have 30-minute assessments but she didn't have any.

"She should have been put in a cubicle but she was sent to the waiting area because there weren't any beds for her.

"When she woke up the next day, she had two burn marks on her arm.

"She had been out the night before and had had a little drink.

(Image: Birmingham Mail)

"She was taken to Heartlands hospital and we got there at about 10.05pm and they had got her in the recess unit but she was non-responsive.

"Her arm was completely dead and there was no blood running to it.

"I think we all went into shock, they hadn't said she wasn't going to make it, they were doing everything in their power to save her.

"They said if they could stabilise her they could amputate it but they couldn't stabilise her.

"Colette, Katie's mother-in-law mentioned that she had a tiny thorn in her wrist that the doctors didn't spot.

"Everything was black and blistered - it looked like someone had poured a boiling hot kettle over her arm.

"If anything positive can come from Katie's death, it is that another life can be saved."

The family are now considering taking legal action against Heart of England Foundation Trust which runs Good Hope.

A spokesperson for Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust which runs Good Hope Hospital, said: "We will be releasing a statement about this case on Monday after we have spoken to the relevant people involved."