14.6 C
London
Thursday, June 4, 2026

Mom died after giving birth ‘when hospital let wound turn septic’

Mom died after giving birth ‘when hospital let wound turn septic’,

A woman tragically died after giving birth to her newborn son in Canada, with her grieving husband blaming the hospital for failing to recognize her symptoms or prescribe medication.

Ravinder Kaur Sidhu, 40, and her husband Gurinder Sidhu, 35, had traveled to Credit Valley Hospital in Mississauga, Ontario and had their baby boy on June 19. 

According to Gurinder, there was no issues with the delivery of their child. The only complication came in the form of a tear in his wife’s vagina that required stitches. 

Just days later, Ravinder died from postpartum sepsis following multi-organ failure.

Gurinder told CTV he believes the death of his wife could have been prevented if her symptoms were properly addressed by health-care professionals. 

He recalled to the outlet how his wife broke out in a fever and shakes, before she started vomiting and complained of pain in her pelvic area. 

According to Gurinder, doctors conducted a blood test but not the type necessary type to determine if bacteria was collecting in her blood stream.

They should have administered broad-based antibiotics while you wait for the blood culture test and whatever comes in the blood culture, then you do the targeting antibiotics, but nothing was done in our case and the whole day was wasted,’ he said.

Ravinder Kaur Sidhu and her husband Gurinder Sidhu traveled to Mississauga's Credit Valley Hospital and had their baby boy on June 19

According to Gurinder, there was no issues with the delivery of their child. The only complication came in the form of a tear in his wife's vagina that required stitches

Gurinder said his wife went without any antibiotics for around 30 hours after her first symptoms appeared. 

Doctors told him they first believed her pain was caused by giving birth, but then changed their stance after suspecting she had sepsis.

Gurinder said that doctors even suggested her infection came from an acupuncture treatment she received days before the birth, despite the tear to her vagina.  

The infection severely damaged his wife’s uterus and started to spread down her leg as it went unchecked. 

On June 21, she underwent a surgery to remove infected tissue from her leg as she developed necrotizing fasciitis, a flesh-eating disease. 

Following the surgery, Gurinder said doctors determined her leg was the primary source of her pain but hours after she was rushed in for a hysterectormy. 

Medical teams discovered her ovaries and uterus were ‘completely necrotic’ while doing so, he told the outlet. 

On June 22, she was then taken to Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center where she given a blood bypass. She died in the early hours of June 23. 

Credit Valley Hospital, in Ontario, Canada

Doctors first believed her pain was caused by giving birth, but then changed their stance after suspecting she had sepsis

We have been devastated. Whatever we built in our lives has gone,’ Gurinder said. 

‘She was the center of our universe for our kids.’ 

He has been left to care for their three kids, two sons and a daughter, who are all under the age of eight. 

‘She was involved in every single step’, he said, telling the outlet he is now looking to sell their businesses to support his family. His late wife ran three three physiotherapy clinics.

Gurinder has filed complaints against Credit Valley Hospital, raising it with Canadian regulatory board the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. 

‘All those who are involved should be held accountable/ When a patient is in such a state and nobody cared, and she was ignored, totally ignored, like, what was happening to her,’ he added.

‘And if this is not killing, then what it is, they did nothing. They waited – just for a simple $2 antibiotics – they waited for 30 hours.’

Trillium Health Partners, who oversee Credit Valley, called her passing a ‘profound loss’. 

Ravinder leaves behind her three kids, two sons and a daughter, who are all under the age of eight

We take the concerns raised by our patients and families very seriously,’ a statement said.

‘As part of our commitment to the highest standards of care, we have a thorough review process led by an interdisciplinary team of clinical experts.

‘Questions about symptom recognition, signs of illness, treatment timelines, and transfer decisions are at the very heart of our review process. We ensure these are addressed directly with patients and families.’

An investigation into her passing is now underway and is expected to be completed in the coming months.  

Advertisement

Ravinder Kaur Sidhu, 40, and her husband Gurinder Sidhu, 35, had traveled to a hospital in Mississauga, Ontario, and had their baby boy on June 19.

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

The best places to live in Britain’s idyllic national parks

Many of us toy with the idea of moving somewhere close to nature, with a friendly community, where the pace of life is more civilised. But where to find such a place? A national park could be the answer.

Ex-karate champ who stole £70k watch from businessman is jailed

Zine Telli, 34, will spend three years behind bars for his role in the theft of Axel Schwan's luxury watch in London on June 30, 2024.

LETTS: Left-wingers went tonto when Nigel Farage got up to speak

Under a science lab microscope you can watch organisms fight against pathogens. The threatened bodies clench and recoil and squirt various acids, hoping to destroy the invasive cells.

Spot the difference! Cheetah cubs snapped hunting with their mother

The cubs appeared to merge together as one due to their near identical colouring and intense, pointed gaze toward their mother.

Tories pressure watchdog for investigation into Henry Nowak officers

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp led calls for the officers who arrested the 18-year-old on bogus racism claims to face a full misconduct investigation.

BBC give grovelling apology to Nigel Farage after ‘defamation’ row

This afternoon the broadcasting behemoth said it had issued a private apology to Mr Farage directly, and published one on its website.

Ex-karate champ who stole £70k watch from businessman is jailed

Zine Telli, 34, will spend three years behind bars for his role in the theft of Axel Schwan's luxury watch in London on June 30, 2024.

What really happened the night Henry Nowak was murdered

December 3, 2025 was supposed to be an ordinary night out for Henry Nowak, celebrating the end of his first term at the University of Southampton with his football teammates

DAN HODGES: Keir Starmer was MIA, but Kemi spoke like a real PM

All successful politicians have The Moment. An instant where national events, the public mood and their political instincts move decisively into alignment. Tuesday was Kemi Badenoch's turn.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img