Dr Heather Steen seeks to be removed from medical register again

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Dr Heather SteenImage source, BBC
Image caption,

Dr Heather Steen is seeking to be removed from the medical register

A doctor accused of a cover-up over the death of a nine-year-old patient has made a renewed application to remove herself from the medical register.

Dr Heather Steen is said by the General Medical Council (GMC) to have acted dishonestly in trying to conceal the circumstances of Claire Roberts' death.

Claire died at the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children in 1996.

At the time, her parents were told a viral infection had spread from her stomach to her brain.

They were told medics had done everything possible to save her.

However, 22 years later a public inquiry concluded Claire died due to "negligent care" from an overdose of fluids and medication.

In March, a similar application from Dr Steen on health grounds was rejected by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) panel which meant the case against the consultant paediatrician could go ahead.

As proceedings reached the halfway stage, Dr Steen was expected to give evidence but instead on Monday her legal team submitted a second bid for voluntary erasure.

A lawyer for the GMC, said: "This is a renewed application. As I understand it, it's put on the basis there has been a deterioration in Dr Steen's health.

"The GMC's report has been served in response. In short, the GMC will be resisting this application."

'Negligent care'

The tribunal, sitting remotely, will hear evidence in private on the issue of Dr Steen's health from expert doctors, with a decision likely to be given next week.

Dr Steen was not present at the hearing and her legal representative said he was content for the application to proceed in her absence.

Image source, Roberts Family
Image caption,

Nine-year old Claire Roberts died in Belfast's Royal Hospital for Sick Children in 1996

The tribunal has previously heard that Alan Roberts, Claire's father, contacted the hospital in October 2004, the day after he watched a television documentary, UTV's When Hospitals Kill, which focused on hyponatraemia - a condition which occurs when there is a shortage of sodium in the bloodstream.

The programme featured the deaths of three children and the build-up of fluid in their brains.

A subsequent public inquiry concluded in 2018 that Claire's death was the result of "negligent care" from an overdose of fluids and medication.

A fresh inquest in 2019 ruled her death was "caused by the treatment she received in hospital".

The GMC say Dr Steen withheld information in the immediate aftermath of Claire's death and also at a meeting with Mr and Mrs Roberts in 2004 and at Claire's first inquest in 2006.

Dr Steen denies the allegations.