Student, 16, dies from a blood clot just days before Christmas after taking her first contraceptive pill in a bid to ease painful periods
- Layla Khan had been on the pill for less than three weeks due to painful periods
A 16-year-old girl has died from a blood clot on her brain after being put on the pill to ease period pain and being wrongly diagnosed with a stomach bug.
Layla Khan, who had three young brothers and a sister, was only three months into a college course and was already being viewed as a potential Oxford student by her lecturers.
But the 16-year-old started suffering from agonising menstrual cycles and was advised to take a contraceptive pill by pals to ease her symptoms.
She began to take them on November 25 but by December 5 she started having headaches – and by the end of the week she began vomiting.
When her worried family contacted the 111 NHS helpline they were told there were ‘no red flags’ and they should just take her for a check up the following morning.
Layla Khan died from a blood clot less than three weeks after going on the contraceptive pill
Layla, pictured left, was the eldest of five children in her family and had just started college
On Monday evening she began screaming in pain and collapsed in the bathroom at home. Her family then drove her to hospital where a blood clot on the brain was identified by a CT scan.
Despite undergoing an emergency operation, the college student later died.
Layla’s family have now spoken out to raise awareness about this rare complication of taking the contraceptive pill, which they believe is likely to be the cause of the fatal clot.
Layla was the eldest of five children in her family, who have been left devastated by her sudden and unexpected death.
She was making new friends three months after starting at college and was in a new relationship when tragedy struck.
Her cousin Alicia Binns, 17, said Layla suffered from painful menstrual cycles and decided to try going on the pill after friends mentioned it helped them.
After taking the pill on November 25, it seemed to help with ‘an issue she has had to put up with for such a long time’.
But just ten days later she began experiencing the migraines and started vomiting.
Layla’s aunt, Jenna Braithwaite, told Yorkshire Live: ‘On the Sunday night, she was being sick, a lot. She was basically vomiting every 30 minutes so they got a GP appointment on the Monday morning, they took her to the GP.
‘Even though she was being sick the whole time she was at the GP’s, they gave her anti-sickness tablets and told her that they thought it was a stomach bug.
‘They said there was no red flags to go to the hospital, and to go to the hospital on Wednesday if it continued.’
By the Monday evening she was screaming in pain. When the teenager collapsed in the bathroom her mother and Mrs Braithwaite carried her to the car to drive her to hospital.
Layla’s family are heartbroken and devastated after her sudden and unexpected death
She was taken from the family home in Immingham, North Lincolnshire, to the nearest hospital about 10 miles away at Grimsby.
A scan revealed a blood clot and Layla was transferred to Hull Royal Infirmary where she underwent an emergency operation. She was then pronounced dead on Wednesday 13 December.
Mrs Braithwaite said words can’t describe how devastated the family are, commenting: ‘The fact that they said there were no red flags and then the day later she’s brain dead, it’s incomprehensible.
‘My sister, she’s got newborn babies to look after and there are other children and she’s got all of that going on at the same time. It’s just such a shock, she’s only just started college and got a job, it’s just a shock, the family’s absolutely devastated.’
Miss Binns commented: ‘Her family had to say their final goodbyes, knowing there was nothing more the doctors could do for her. They made a selfless choice to donate Layla’s organs and save five other people’s lives before Christmas, which is the greatest gift they could give to anybody at this time.’
She said doctors don’t know of any other cause for the blood clot and told the family there was no infection.
Miss Binns said the family have gone public as ‘the risks are not spoken about enough.’
Paying tribute online to her cousin, she said Layla was ‘beautiful and intelligent, loved and cherished by so many people, and had her whole life ahead of her.’
Adding that she had ‘beauty that would light a room and intelligence that even had her college interviewer give her hope at getting into Oxford University.’
The NHS website states: ‘The risk of getting a blood clot is very small, but your doctor will check if you have certain risk factors before prescribing the pill.’
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