
Being stuck in NHS bed led to death, inquest finds
Being stuck in NHS bed led to death, inquest findsImage caption, Tim Hull spent the last seven months of his life confined to a bed that was too smallByAdam EleyBBC NewsPublished1 hour agoA man who stopped life-saving...
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Here is the latest breaking news from around the world: Being stuck in NHS bed led to death, inquest findsImage caption, Tim Hull spent the last seven months of his life confined to a bed that was too smallByAdam EleyBBC NewsPublished1 hour agoA man who stopped life-saving medication because of his distress at a lack of health and care support, died from infections caused by being bedbound, an inquest has found. Tim Hull, 56, from Worcester, who was 6ft 10in, spent seven months unable to move from a bed that was too small for him and left him in severe pain, while waiting for the NHS to provide the hoist he needed. The coroner also heard evidence that complex patients like Hull risked falling through the cracks between services.
Local NHS teams have been contacted for comment. The coroner said staff did "the best they could". Hull had been getting medication after having a kidney transplant.
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He also had a rare neurological condition. 'Hideously uncomfortable'In July 2025, two months before his death, Hull, who previously ran his own handyman business and housed Ukrainian refugees for two years, told the about the lengthy waits he faced for a hoist, a wheelchair and a bed that was big enough for him while living in his own home. He had previously been in the Guinness Book of Records along with his brother as the tallest twins in Britain.
"Above a certain height, you don't exist," Hull told the . He also said his standard of living was "very, very low". He described the difficulties of trying to see the right doctors and getting the social care he needed.
The situation led to his decision to stop taking medication that was needed to ensure the continued functioning of a transplanted kidney his brother had donated to him. Dying, he said, "would be a better option than lying in bed 24 hours a day". Hull had a rare neurological condition, Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia , external– unrelated to his height – which causes spasms and muscle weakness.
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Pain, fatigue and depression are also common symptoms. The inquest was told as a result of the 's reporting, local community teams began working with the family to install a ceiling hoist – first discussed three months earlier - and an extension to Hull's bed. He had spent two years in a standard hospital bed, provided by the NHS, which he described as "hideously uncomfortable" and like "torture".
An initial bed extension was eventually provided, but caused him to sit up in a position that presented a choking risk. Image source, Family photoImage caption, Tim pictured in 2023. His health declined rapidly in the last three years of his lifeBy the time the new bed extension and hoist were to be installed, in September 2025, Hull had become too ill, and died soon after.
He had previously told the : "If I could be hoisted out and sat up to have dinner, if I could be wheeled out into the garden just to get a change of scenery, that could help a lot.
The story has become one of the most prominent items on the global agenda.





