Hospital nurse and 'amazing' mum died in car crash after 12-hour night shift

Julie MarlowJulie Marlow
Julie Marlow
A NURSE driving home after a 12-hour night shift in a Wakefield hospital's emergency department may have fallen asleep or become distracted at the wheel of her car  before a  crash that claimed her life, an inquest heard.

Wakefield Coroner's Court heard 38-year-old Julie Marlow was an "amazing" mother-of-two children and an "excellent" trauma nurse who had been working agency shifts in the accident and emergency department at Pinderfields Hospital.

Mrs Marlow, of Pontefract, had started work at 7pm on March 12 2018 and her shift ended at 7am the following morning, the inquest was told.

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Mrs Marlow was driving her black Mercedes M-Class car along Wrangbrook Lane towards the A1 at Upton near Pontefract at around 7.45am on March 13 when it veered into the opposite carriageway and hit two vehicles travelling in the opposite direction towards South Elmsall.

Her Mercedes car lost a wheel when it clipped a Mercedes HGV before the car collided with a 7.5 tonne Ford Iveco flatbed lorry.

Mrs Marlow, who suffered a traumatic brain and spinal injury, was airlifted by air ambulance to Leeds General Infirmary where she was pronounced dead just after 5.30pm that day.

Ford Iveco driver Glenn Marsden wrote in a statement read out at the inquest: "There was nothing I could do to stop it (the car) hitting the wagon."

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Witness Joseph Hutchinson, who was passenger in a Citroen van on Wrangbrook Lane, wrote in a statement: "I just don't know what made the Mercedes (car) veer to the right.

"The Mercedes (car) just kept moving on to the the right side of the road, not in a sharp movement.

"It looked to me as though the lady had fallen asleep or been distracted as it wasn't a normal manouvre."

West Yorkshire Police collision investigator Robert Eyre said all three vehicles involved were defect free and said the drivers of the Iveco truck and Mercedes HGV were travelling within the 50mph speed limit.

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Detective sergeant Fiona Hoodless of West Yorkshire Police said: "We are never going to be able to say for definite what has happened.

"Bearing in mind the witness accounts we have obtained - she had worked a night shift and the deviation (of the car) - it would suggest she had maybe fallen asleep or was distracted by something we didn't know about."

Recording a verdict that Mrs Marlow died as a result of a road traffic collision, area coroner Jonathan Leach said: "The most likely scenario is that, following a lengthy night shift, her attention wandered to the extent that her vehicle inadvertently went into the offside lane and a collision occurred."

In a statement read out at he inquest, Mrs Marlow's mother Kathleen Miskell said her daughter had earned a degree in nursing, adding: "Julie became an excellent trauma nurse and spent much of her career working in accident and emergency and also became a practice nurse."

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Kathleen Miskell added: "As well as being an amazing mum, Julie was a loving daughter, a fabulous auntie and the best sister and friend you could ask for.

"She is missed every minute of every day and will stay in our hearts forever."

Dawn Parkes, deputy director of nursing at The Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust, said after the inquest: “At Mid Yorkshire we offer a variety of work patterns for staff in common with all other trusts, and we encourage and support staff to take regular breaks.

"We recognise, however, that working within busy NHS departments can be tiring for all staff. This is a tragic accident and a terrible loss for Julie’s family and friends, to whom we offer ourheartfelt condolences.”

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