The grandfather of a young Northland rugby player who died after receiving a head knock in a game - suffering a "re-bleed" of a large brain clot no one knew he had - wants more CT scans carried out on people who receive head injuries.
Jordan Kemp, 17, died in Auckland Hospital on July 6, 2014, as a result of a significant head injury suffered while playing rugby the previous day, Coroner Brandt Shortland has ruled.
Mr Shortland found Jordan suffered a blunt-force head trauma, which caused a re-bleed of an existing acute chronic subdural haematoma - a large brain clot - on the left side of his head.
This clot had formed four months before, in March, after Jordan was knocked out playing rugby.
Forensic pathologist Dr Fintan Garavan noted the clot was "clinically silent" unless a CT scan was carried out.