No ‘significant’ mould found in Luke Brooks' house family believe contributed to his death
Granada Reports correspondent Rob Smith sent this report from court
There was no “significant” mould found in a house that a family believe contributed to the death of their son, an inquest has been told.
Luke Brooks’ parents – Patricia and James – have blamed mould in the damp property where they lived in Oldham, Greater Manchester, for his death in October 2022.
Mr Brooks, 27, died after developing an acute respiratory illness, an inquest in Rochdale has heard.
His mother previously told the hearing she begged Oldham Council to help her family move from the property on Huxley Street, which she said was plagued with mould and leaked rain through the roof.
But the inquest also heard how Mr Brooks lived in “squalor” in the bedroom where he spent most of his time, and which he shared with his friend Chris Haycock and their three dogs.
On Wednesday, a police officer and environmental health manager both said they inspected the house after Mr Brooks’ death, but that it had been cleaned and was not in the same condition he would have been living in.
Asked by senior coroner Joanne Kearsley if there was “significant” mould in the house, Joanne Collier, assistant environmental health manager for the council, said: “No, there was mould growing in the bathroom ceiling which needed attending to but it was not significant in that it was not in the living room, not in the bedroom. It wasn’t in those lifestyle areas you’re constantly going in.”
Detective Inspector Andrew Fink, of Greater Manchester Police, said he noticed a small patch of mould above the radiator in the bathroom but no other areas.
But he said Mr Brook’s sister Sarah told him she had extensively cleaned Mr Brooks’ bedroom and removed any mould.
His statement from the visit noted seeing leftover plates and cutlery, unclean bedding and evidence of Mr Brooks’ dogs “using the bedroom as a toilet at that time”.
A pathologist previously told the inquest it was unlikely the mould that contributed to Mr Brooks’ death – aspergillus – was the same as that growing on the walls in his house, which was mostly penicillium.
Fungus expert Professor Malcolm Richardson said he found “very, very little” evidence of aspergillus in the house with just one spore found in the bedroom where Mr Brooks died.
Ms Collier said that there had “definitely been missed opportunities with regards to customer care” in the Brooks’ family’s case after the inquest heard the council’s Environmental Health team had been contacted by charity Positive Steps in 2021 about the property being in disrepair, but the council never organised an inspection as a result.
In November 2021, the family told Environmental Health that there was a leak in the bathroom and the house was full of mould.
An officer carried out an inspection and noted one “category 1” hazard – broken lights on the first floor – but there was no reference to damp and mould in their report.
An infectious disease specialist said “no single factor” could be confirmed as a cause of the condition Mr Brooks suffered.
A statement read to the inquest from Dr Chris Kosmidis said aspergillus is inhaled daily and the immune system of a healthy person can rapidly eliminate aspergillus particles, but it can affect people with weakened immune systems – such as people with cancer or HIV – or people who have had influenza or Covid-19.
Dr Kosmidis said Mr Brooks had reported symptoms which “could be suggestive of a viral infection,” which could have made him more susceptible to aspergillus. He had a negative Covid-19 test, the inquest heard.
The expert said he could not find cases of aspergillus pneumonia linked to a mouldy room. He said there were links with cannabis, which Mr Brooks was known to smoke, and there had been a number of cases of aspergillosis among cannabis smokers, but the links “cannot be proven”.
The inquest continues.
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