The phones are a part of Aishwarya’s Care Call system, which was created with the blessing of the parents of Aishwarya Aswath who died at PCH on April 3.
Aishwarya’s parents ready to ‘climb a mountain’ to stop further hospital deaths
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Four months on from the death of his bubbly and intelligent seven-year-old daughter Aishwarya, Aswath Chavittupara is no longer a broken man.
At their family home where he lives with his wife Prasitha Sasidharan and their three other children in Morley, the lime green walls are dotted with photo frames containing cherished memories of their smiling girl.
Aswath Chavittupara, 39, outside his Morley home.
Credit:Marta Pascual Juanola
His demeanour is a world apart from the father shaking and barely able to form words as he desperately called for answers over why his daughter died on the Easter long weekend in what had been repeatedly called a “world-class” healthcare system by the West Australian government.
Aishwarya s parents ready to climb a mountain to stop further hospital deaths theage.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theage.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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A similar system will now be brought in because another child, seven-year-old Aishwarya Aswath, died in similar harrowing circumstances on Easter Saturday this year. It brought back raw memories. It brought back memories of Malakai. So yeah, I feel for the family, Ms Brown said. I know what they would have been going through.
The tragedy of Malakai s death unfolded across five days in 2016. On Monday, August 22, the seven-month-old became unwell and his parents took him to Midland Hospital. They went home after being told he was teething.
On Tuesday an ambulance took him to Princess Margaret Hospital after a high heart rate and vomiting but he was sent home with Panadol.Â