Widower settles action against HSE over death of wife from breast cancer
Feb 21, 24

High Court reporters
The family of a 44-year-old woman who died of breast cancer has settled a High Court action against the HSE over her death.
Catherine Halligan, an executive officer with the Courts Service in Waterford, was a much-loved wife, mother, daughter and sister, the High Court heard.
The family’s counsel, Oonah McCrann SC, instructed by Ernest Cantillons solicitors, told the court the tragedy for Catherine’s family was that her “death was avoidable.”
Catherine’s widower, Brendan Halligan, had sued the HSE over the death of his wife in November 2018, over four years after she was first investigated for a lump on her breast.
It was claimed the HSE allegedly failed to provide appropriate care for Ms Halligan, and that there had been an alleged failure to carry out an appropriate triple assessment of a mass on her right breast, including a biopsy when she was assessed at the Breast Clinic at University Hospital Waterford on June 4th, 2014.
There was, it was further claimed, a delay in the treatment of Ms Halligan’s breast cancer, and there was an alleged failure to refer Ms Halligan for a breast MRI scan after an irregular lump was recorded on June 4th, 2014, and noted by a consultant surgeon as suspicious for cancer and probably malignant.
There had been, it was alleged, an inappropriate concentration on an abnormality detected on Ms Halligan’s left breast in the June assessment.






