
A 20‑year‑old law student, Libby Instone, died after being repeatedly dismissed as a ‘time‑waster’ while hospital staff were watching the Lionesses’ World Cup final, according to multiple inquest reports.
The case is one of the most obvious and startling examples of NHS negligence, and it infuriates me greatly because young, ill individuals are being horrifically let down by staff members’ lack of concern.
Libby Instone, from Billingham, Teesside, became violently sick after returning from London in August 2023. Over three visits in just over 24 hours, she was constantly told she had gastroenteritis despite days of vomiting, agonising abdominal pain, vomiting black fluid, which is a red-flag sign for internal bleeding, and collapsing from exhaustion.
Staff at North Tees Hospital’s Urgent Care Centre did not examine her properly, did not order imaging, and did not escalate her case; she, in fact, had a blocked small intestine that could have been treated with surgery if detected in time, but the most distrubing detail of all was that during her critical period of decline, nurses were assembled around a TV watching the Women’s World Cup final. When her parents asked for help, they were reportedly told, ‘You won’t get anywhere with them until the match is over.’
It took 15–20 minutes before anyone even checked on her.
Teesside Coroner Clare Bailey ruled that Libby died from intestinal infarction, which is a loss of blood supply to the bowel.
There were gross failures in basic medical care; the staff failed to consider anything beyond gastroenteritis despite four days of agonising symptoms, and this contributed directly to her death. This wasn’t a tragic mistake; it was systemic neglect.
This is precisely the kind of NHS failure that needs to be called out because a young, fit woman was ignored, undervalued, and left to deteriorate while staff prioritised a football match.
She vomited black liquid in the car park after being discharged at 1:30 am.
A staff member subsequently admitted they ‘thought she was a time‑waster.’
She was so weak she could hardly stand, yet she was still sent home.
This wasn’t subtle. It was evident, escalating, and repeatedly dismissed, and it beggars belief, but the horrible reality is that it’s not unbelievable anymore; it’s predictable, it’s familiar, and that’s the part that makes my disgust so pungent because we see this pattern again and again.
It’s not even about football; it’s about attitude.
It’s about staff who behave as if patients are interruptions, not responsibilities.
It’s about a workplace where nobody steps in and says, ‘Oi, this girl is seriously unwell — stop watching the telly and do your job,’ and that silence is the actual killer, and this isn’t a one-off, it’s part of a wider pattern — paramedics ignoring red flags, GPs dismissing serious symptoms, A&E staff assuming ‘anxiety’, ‘gastro’ are time-wasters.
Young people dying of treatable conditions, families being told they’re ‘overreacting’, and staff being more focused on breaks, phones, or social chatter than patients, and every time the coroner says the same thing, ‘missed opportunities. Neglect, and avoidable death.’ And nothing ever changes.
There are brilliant NHS staff — of course, there are — but the system now shields the worst, not the best.
The lazy ones. The indifferent ones. The ones who roll their eyes at patients. The ones who treat pain as an inconvenience. The ones who think ‘time‑waster’ before they think ‘what if this is serious?’ And because they face no consequences, they keep doing it. That’s why these stories keep happening.








