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Public inquiries not delivering change, report warns

Public inquiries into disasters such as the Grenfell Tower fire take too long and often do not lead to change, a Lords report has found.

Inquiries are routinely set up by governments to "learn lessons" and avoid future tragedies.

But Lord Norton, who led the report, said: “Lessons learned' is an entirely vacuous phrase if lessons aren’t being learned because inquiry recommendations are ignored or delayed.

“Furthermore, it is insulting and upsetting for victims, survivors and their families who frequently hope that, from their unimaginable grief, something positive might prevail.”

The report sets out ways to make inquiries more effective. The government said it would study the recommendations.

In recent years there have been large-scale inquiries launched into subjects including Grenfell, the infected blood scandal and the Covid pandemic.

However, earlier this year bereaved families expressed their fears that the recommendations from these inquiries would “simply disappear”.

Some campaigners said, external they have “no faith” that the reports would lead to change.

A report by the House of Lords Statutory Inquiries Committee has now called for a rethink in how inquiries are carried out and crucially, how their recommendations, are implemented.

The committee warned that inquiries were perceived as “frequently too long and expensive, leading to a loss of public confidence and protracted trauma”.

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Source: BBC News, 16 September 2024

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Assisted dying law change backed by 'citizens' jury'

The first “citizens’ jury” on assisted dying in England has backed a change in the law to allow people who are terminally ill to end their life.

A jury of 28 people concluded it should be an option for those judged to have capacity to make their own decisions.

While it has no legal powers, the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, which set up the jury, said it represented a crucial new piece of evidence in the debate as it allowed the public to consider the issues more deeply than they could in surveys.

However, campaigners questioned the validity of the exercise, as a majority of those recruited were already in favour of changing the law.

Dr Gordon Macdonald, of the Care Not Killing campaign group, said: "A jury in a court of law must be rigorously impartial with no strong views about the case they are judging.

"So, what could have been a serious contribution to this important debate seemingly fails the impartiality test."

However, Nuffield Council on Bioethics director Danielle Hamm said that in such a “highly complex, sensitive and ethically charged” debate as assisted dying, a citizens' jury allowed more in-depth consideration to be given to the issue, as well as exploring the reasons for people forming their views.

The council said it had set up the jury because of the growing interest in the issue.

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Source: BBC News, 13 September 2024

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Airedale NHS FT delay EPR go-live for further safety testing

Airedale NHS Foundation Trust told Digital Health News that it has pushed back the go-live date for its Oracle Health electronic patient record (EPR) system to allow further testing to ensure it is safe and efficient.

The Oracle Health Millennium EPR is able to store more in-depth clinical information on patients in one place, referred to as a ‘single source of truth’.

In a statement published on its website, the trust said: “Our aim was to introduce our new EPR in September 2024. This date has now been changed to November 2024.

“This date has been reviewed to ensure that when the EPR goes live it is safe and efficient. We would never introduce a new system unless we are confident that it will be safe.”

David Crampsey, deputy chief executive at Airedale NHS FT and chair of the Electronic Patient Record Transformation Assurance Group, said: “We have been working alongside our technical supplier, Oracle Health, as well as a wide range of stakeholders to ensure the EPR system meets our functionality requirements and that we have a robust system in place.

“We have moved the go-live date for the new system to enable our technical teams to incorporate the developments based on stakeholder feedback and allow for further testing.

“The comprehensive testing element of the programme ensures that the system is as safe as possible and will mean a smoother transition for both patients and staff”.

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Source: Digital Health News, 9 September 2024

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Turkish plastic surgery clinics let sales staff do assessments

Turkish medical clinics’ sales operations in Britain are being investigated by the health watchdog after they were found to be using unregulated appointments to physically examine young women and sign them up for plastic ­surgery.

An undercover Times reporter attended one appointment in London where a saleswoman who was not a professional medic asked her to undress, examined her and said she could create a treatment plan because “plastic surgery is a bit, I mean, kind of basic”.

Agents for Turkish clinics were willing to sign up the reporter for invasive surgeries including breast augmentation and buttock enhancement surgery — known as a Brazilian butt lift (BBL) — after conversations on WhatsApp.

After making an online inquiry, the reporter was texted by a salesman to say a surgeon in Turkey deemed her a “very suitable candidate” for surgery and she “can achieve a perfect result”.

On Thursday the Care Quality Commission (CQC) began an investigation. A spokesman said it would determine whether the organisations hosting the appointments in England were “operating unlawfully without being correctly registered”.

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Source: The Times, 13 September 2024

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IT system linked to clinical harm still used by 14 trusts

More than a dozen trusts are still using a widely criticised “suboptimal” electronic patient record system, which was discontinued by its supplier more than two years ago, HSJ can reveal.

A total of 14 trusts in England are still using the Lorenzo electronic patient record, made by the firm Dedalus, according to information collected by HSJ.

The supplier announced in 2022 it was no longer offering its Lorenzo product in the UK, and instead encouraging customers to move to its newer Orbis EPR.

Of the 14 trusts still using Lorenzo, eight have yet to carry out a procurement for a replacement, with some blaming a lack of funding.

Many trusts began moving away from Lorenzo in 2020 following the failed National Programme for IT and amid concerns about its quality.

Several incidents of clinical harm have been linked to the system in coroners’ reports and inquests, with issues including record duplication, deleting patient records and failing to send patient letters.

An NHS spokesperson said: “The NHS is investing additional funding to ensure hospitals have the right digital foundations in place to share information effectively so health and care staff can provide better care to patients.

“Electronic Patient Record procurements are large and complex investments for local organisations and implementations are a lengthy endeavour, which is why the NHS is providing comprehensive support to NHS organisations.”

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Source: HSJ, 13 September 2024

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Ambulance services hit crucial target

Ambulances reached some of the most seriously ill people within an average of 30 minutes last month – meeting a key NHS England target for the first time in more than a year.

Category 2 response times fell to 27m 25s in August, a fall of 6m from the previous month and the first time the 30m target imposed by NHS England’s urgent care recovery plan had been met since April 2023. These calls include suspected strokes and heart attacks.

The most serious patients – those in category 1, which includes cardiac and respiratory arrests – were reached in 8m 3s, the best performance since June 2021.

Both category 1 and category 2 responses were still outside the constitutional targets of 7m and 18m. However, the 30m interim target for category 2 calls has been a bellwether for how the NHS is delivering – last year ambulance trusts missed it with an average performance of more than 36m.

The position was helped by relatively low incident numbers in August, compared with recent months but also by a remarkable turnaround in performance by West Midlands Ambulance Services University Foundation Trust, which came close to hitting the 18m target at 18m 36s. In 2023-24 it averaged over 36m.

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Source: HSJ, 12 September 2024

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Charity urges Government to take sepsis as seriously as strokes and heart attacks amidst record public awareness levels

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National charity the UK Sepsis Trust (UKST) urges the government to re-prioritise sepsis, ensuring it is treated with the same urgency and resources as strokes and heart attacks, after a new YouGov survey commissioned by UKST has detected record public awareness levels.

According to the nationally representative omnibus survey, an impressive 94% of the 2,087 respondents are aware of sepsis, whilst 91% recognise it as a medical emergency. This is a marked increase from 76% in 2019 and baseline levels 27% in 2012, showcasing the effectiveness of the charity’s ongoing awareness campaigns.

These figures surpass public awareness levels in several other developed countries, including the United States (63%)1, and Germany (61%).

Dr Ron Daniels, Founder & Joint CEO of the UK Sepsis Trust, said: “While we’re encouraged by the high level of public awareness in the UK, which exceeds that of most other developed nations, awareness alone is not enough. It is now the responsibility of the Government to ensure our health service is equipped to respond effectively and reliably to people with sepsis of all ages. By matching this awareness with action, we can save lives and improve outcomes for the thousands of people affected the condition each year.”

While awareness that sepsis is a medical emergency has encouragingly increased, the same YouGov survey found that there is still limited understanding of the various symptoms, which differ for adults and children; only 31% of respondents said they would be confident recognising if they or someone else might have sepsis.

The YouGov survey also revealed that 45% of respondents either know someone affected by sepsis or have been personally affected by the condition. This statistic underscores the pervasive impact of sepsis on individuals and families across the UK, with 245,000 affected each year and 48,000 losing their lives to this often ‘killer’ condition.

Despite this encouraging improvement in public awareness, there remains a pressing need to enhance sepsis care within our health services. One family that knows this only too well is medically trained professionals Duaa Sidahmed and Mohammed Hassan, who lost their son Yousef to sepsis in February 2023, just after his first birthday, despite following the charity’s guidance to ‘Just Ask: Could it be Sepsis?’.

Mohammed said: “I was dismissed when I asked the doctor if it could be sepsis; so record public awareness levels are encouraging, but awareness only goes so far. Health professionals need to listen to families that raise their concerns and follow the sepsis care pathway, to prevent tragedies like the one our family has experienced.”

Duaa said: “We can’t find the words that can describe the pain of losing Yousef, or the love we have for him. We were over consumed by anger, but with the support of our family and friends, and reaching out to the UK Sepsis Trust as well, that feeling is a bit better now, but we had many moments of shock and denial. Sometimes I just can’t believe that Yousef is really gone, and I find myself calling his name or singing his favourite songs. But every day is a hard day. Everything seems to be triggering and I think we’re just trying our best to cope and accept that grief will forever be a part of us, and this is our way now to show love and remember Yousef.”

To help improve sepsis outcomes, The UK Sepsis Trust is calling for the government to:

  • Measure and publish performance data on the sepsis care pathway. Reliable data are needed to understand the quality of NHS sepsis care, identify opportunities for improvement and provide targeted support where needed.
  • Empower frontline decision-making with better integration of rapid diagnostics. There is no single test to diagnose sepsis, but diagnostics help doctors make important decisions about the types of treatment to use. Diagnostic tests are typically done in centralised laboratories, which means clinicians have to wait for the results. Time is of the essence when treating sepsis, so health professionals need access to fast and reliable tests to reduce preventable deaths.
  • Raise awareness of the signs and symptoms of sepsis and signpost rehabilitation services to reduce pressures on the NHS. Empowering the public to ‘Just ask “Could it be sepsis?” can help save lives, and ensuring survivors have access to ongoing care and support will help keep them well and out of hospital.

Learn more about sepsis and its signs at the UK Sepsis Trust's website.

#SepsisSavvy!

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Australians urged to get whooping cough vaccination as infections rise more than tenfold in year

Health authorities across Australia are urging people to get vaccinated as cases of pertussis, commonly known as whooping cough, continue to surge.

The latest national data shows more than 26,700 cases reported so far in 2024, compared with 2,451 cases for all of 2023. The numbers are being driven by cases in Queensland and NSW.

Data published on Thursday shows more than 12,700 of the cases reported are in NSW – the highest level since 2016. In Queensland, there have been almost 8,600 cases, compared with just over 100 cases in the same period in 2023.

Victoria has seen more than 4,000 cases, while in South Australia, cases are at a six-year high; health authorities there have alerted to almost 550 infections so far in 2024.

Babies less than six months old are at greatest risk of severe disease and death, because they are too young to get vaccinated. This means pregnant women, parents and carers of babies, grandparents and other people in close contact with babies need to be vaccinated to protect them.

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Source: The Guardian, 12 September 2024

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Suicidal patients ‘ignored’ and accused of ‘attention seeking’ by NHS services, national probe warns

Suicidal patients are being ignored and accused of “attention seeking” as families have to fight to keep them in hospital, a national inquiry into mental health services has found.

The investigation has warned NHS mental health services are placing critically ill suicidal patients at risk of harm by using the wrong suicide assessments and ignoring warnings over early discharge from hospital.

The inquiry, by the Health Services Safety Investigation Branch, found examples of staff who had accused suicidal patients of “attention seeking” and instances of patients being discharged from mental health units before they were ready.

The father of one young person described having to get on the floor and beg staff not to discharge his daughter, while another patient went on to have life-changing injuries just hours after they were discharged.

Former health secretary Steve Barclay commissioned HSSIB to investigate safety concerns across mental health services following a series of reports from The Independent exposing “systemic abuse” at a group of children’s mental health hospitals.

The HSSIB findings come as a major public inquiry into the deaths of more than 2,000 patients cared for by mental health hospitals in Essex was launched this week. The inquiry chair Baroness Kate Lampard warned the shocking scale of deaths due to service failures may never be truly known.

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Source: The Independent, 11 September 2024

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Darzi review says the NHS is in a critical condition but sets out a treatment plan

Even factoring in the many manifestations over recent years of the NHS’s deep crisis, some of Lord Ara Darzi’s findings in his verdict on the state of the service are arresting. A&E is in such “an awful state” that thousands of people die every year because they aren’t seen there fast enough.

“Starving” the service of vital capital funding has left “crumbling buildings, mental health patients being accommodated in Victorian-era cells infested with vermin with 17 men sharing two showers, and parts of the NHS operating in decrepit portable buildings”. Efforts to improve early diagnosis of cancer saw “no progress whatsoever made … between 2013 and 2021”, despite many lives depending on that.

But Darzi’s report is more than just another litany of NHS gloom. Like any good doctor, he has not just diagnosed what ails the patient but also set out his treatment plan to restore good health. Despite concluding that the NHS “is in critical condition”, he adds, reassuringly, “its vital signs are strong”. To prove his case, he cites the service’s “extraordinary depth of clinical talent”, staff’s “shared passion and determination to make the NHS better for our patients” and the fact that “the NHS has more resources than ever before”.

On waiting times, he is quite hopeful that things will – eventually – get better. 

Wes Streeting asked Lord Darzi to make his report a roadmap for the 10-year plan, which is expected next spring. It includes the advice that, with so many staff now feeling so “disengaged” after Covid, the NHS workforce must be re-engaged and re-energised. That is vital for its own sake but also because without happier staff the NHS will not be able to solve its productivity puzzle, which is that, despite record staff numbers and its biggest ever budget, its productivity has fallen. Improved pay should help but better working conditions are needed too.

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Source: The Guardian, 11 September 2024

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Child spent 44 days in A&E waiting for care placement

A child spent more than a month ‘stuck in a room with the lights on’ in an accident and emergency department, a trust has revealed.

The child waited 44 days, while another child spent more than 11 days in the emergency department while waiting for a local authority placement, according to Matthew Trainer, CEO of Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospital. Both had mental health needs and/or learning disabilities.

Mr Trainer said the next longest recent stays in ED were two adult mental health patients, who spent 82 hours and 46 hours waiting for mental health beds.

The trust would not share more information on the cases due to the risk of identifying the patients, but said that the most common reason for long waits for children was that they are under the care of local authorities, often due to conditions related to neurodiversity, and waiting for a suitable care placement/accommodation, rather than an NHS bed.

Lesley Seary, a BHRUT non-executive director, said at the trust’s board meeting last week: “It’s both distressing for [the children] and distressing for the staff. Although in some cases, they see it as a place of safety, which is slightly depressing but good that we are at least seen as a place of safety.

“I just wonder, are our local authority colleagues doing all they can and understanding enough? I appreciate the difficulties they have in finding the right kind of accommodation. 

“We’re probably safer than some other places could be, but it just does not feel right that a young person was stuck in a room in A&E with the lights on all the time because we can’t find an alternative.”

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Source: HSJ, 11 September 2024

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NHS must reform or die, PM says after major report

"Ballooning" NHS England waiting times and delays getting emergency treatment are costing lives, according to a critical government-commissioned report on the service.

People have "every right to be angry," the prime minister will say on Thursday, adding the health service must "reform or die".

Health Secretary Wes Streeting has warned the NHS could "go bust" if the government does not reform it to account for an ageing society, more sick people and rising costs.

He pledged to spend a greater proportion of the NHS budget on GPs, social care and "community services" than on hospitals, which he said would help alleviate pressure on the service overall.

The external report was the result of a nine-week review by the independent peer and NHS surgeon Lord Darzi.

He was asked by Labour, shortly after the election, to identify the failings in the health service, but his remit did not stretch to coming up with solutions.

His findings present a stark picture of a service which he says is in a "critical condition" and "serious trouble".

In a speech later, Sir Keir Starmer will respond to the report by promising "the biggest reimagining of the NHS" since it was formed, with a new 10-year plan for the health service to be published in the coming months.

He will propose three key areas of reform: the transition to a digital NHS, moving more care from hospitals to communities, and focusing efforts on prevention over sickness.

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Source: BBC News, 11 September 2024

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NHS trust admits contaminated feed caused baby’s death after decade of denial

An NHS trust has admitted that a highly vulnerable baby died because of contaminated feed that it gave her, after denying that for more than a decade.

At an inquest on Tuesday, Guy’s and St Thomas’ trust said it had given Aviva Otte a nutritional product containing deadly bacteria in January 2014. It had previously insisted to her mother, a coroner and the Guardian on multiple occasions that she had died of natural causes.

The change in GSTT’s explanation of Aviva’s death came during the second day of an inquest into her death and the deaths of two other babies in a separate outbreak of Bacillus cereus five months later.

Giving evidence at Southwark coroner’s court in London, Dr Grenville Fox – a senior consultant neonatologist who worked in the neonatal unit where Aviva was treated – said that it was now his opinion that the parenteral nutrition she received was the main cause of her death.

His statement represents a significant U-turn by GSTT. It also raises questions about its conduct and honesty over the first outbreak of Bacillus cereus in late 2013 and early 2014, in which four babies including Aviva were infected, which the Guardian first revealed in June 2022.

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Source: The Guardian, 10 September 2024

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Doctor worked in NHS for six months despite sexual harassment allegations

Serial killer Lucy Letby has been compared to Harold Shipman at a public inquiry opened up into the circumstances around the nurse’s murders.

The Thirwall Inquiry, which began on Monday, is looking into the events surrounding the crimes of Lucy Letby, including the failures of the hospital staff and leadership to respond to concerns raised.

The inquiry’s opening came amid growing speculation over the evidence used to convict Letby over the killings at Chester Countess Hospital last year. Chairwoman Lady Justice Thirwall started the hearing by stating it had caused “an enormous amount of stress” for the families of victims.

Rachel Langdale KC, counsel to the inquiry, then appeared to stamp down the validity of the convictions by comparing Letby to other serial killers, including GP Harold Shipman and nurse killer Beverley Allitt, who she said were manipulative and skilled at hiding in plain sight.

Shipman was found to have killed 250 of his patients while Allitt was convicted of killing four babies in the 1990s.

Ms Langdale said the third part of the inquiry would consider the wider NHS, including the current culture, governance and management structures.

She said: “History tells us that serial killers are deceptive, manipulative and skilled at hiding in plain sight.”

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Source: The Independent, 10 September 2024

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National bodies ‘failed to help staff with rationing care during covid’

Six in 10 healthcare professionals said they lacked support from national bodies like NHS England and the Department of Health and Social Care when making decisions about which patients to prioritise for higher-intensity care during the pandemic, according to research.

A similar proportion of staff said they were unable to escalate some patients to a higher level of care, when they otherwise would have, a survey carried out for the covid-19 inquiry found.

The most common reasons given for not escalating were a lack of staff and not enough beds, including for high dependency care and for invasive mechanical ventilation.

It comes as NHS England’s representative, Eleanor Grey KC, urged the inquiry to “bear in mind the resources that were available” and “external constraints… such as the ageing NHS estate”.

Ms Grey also argued the exercise should consider what alternative decisions could have been taken by NHSE, arguing: “Evidence of the harm caused by a measure that was adopted has to be balanced by an equally serious assessment of the anticipated harms of alternatives.”

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Source: HSJ, 11 September 2024

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11,000 patients may have been given wrong test result

Up to 11,000 patients may have received incorrect test results – including being misdiagnosed as diabetic – due to an equipment error at a trust, HSJ has learned. 

Bedfordshire Hospitals Foundation Trust (BHFT) experienced an intermittent issue with a machine used to analyse blood samples at its Luton hospital between April and July this year.

This affected blood tests are used to measure glucose levels, to diagnose type 2 diabetes and pre-diabetes, as well as to monitor those with known diabetes. 

The trust is contacting all patients who may have received an incorrect result and inviting them to take another test.

The trust said a review into this was ongoing and the incident had been reported to the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency.

BHFT said it could not determine the level of harm until all patients have been retested. However it did not expect the issue to have caused serious harm at this stage, and patients were being advised not to worry.

It said patients may have received an incorrect diagnosis of diabetes, or prediabetes or given management advice for known diabetes based on an erroneous result. There were no concerns that a diagnosis of diabetes may have been missed as the issue was causing higher results to be measured, according to the trust. 

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Source: HSJ, 11 September 2024

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USA: Data analysis reveals common errors that prevent patients from getting timely, accurate diagnoses

A new data analysis from ECRI, a global patient safety nonprofit, found that issues processing medical tests, delays in referrals, and miscommunication among healthcare staff are key drivers of diagnostic errors.

ECRI's data analysis found that most errors (nearly 70%) occurred during the testing process – including when healthcare staff are ordering, collecting, processing, obtaining results, or communicating results. Twelve percent of errors occurred in the monitoring and follow-up phase; with nearly nine percent during the referral and consultation phase.

Of errors that occurred during testing, more than 23% were a result of a technical or processing error, like the misuse of testing equipment, a poorly processed specimen, or a clinician lacking the proper skill to conduct the test. Another 20 percent of testing errors were a result of mixed-up samples, mislabeled specimens, and tests performed on the wrong patient.

“It’s a common misconception that if a patient has a missed or incorrect diagnosis, their doctor came up with the wrong hypothesis after having all the facts,” said ECRI President and CEO Marcus Schabacker. “That does happen occasionally, but we found that was tied to less than 3 percent of diagnostic errors. What’s more likely to break the diagnostic process are technical, administrative and communication-related issues. These represent system failures, where many small mistakes lead to one big mistake.” 

Many factors can cause diagnostic errors, including miscommunication among providers; miscommunication between providers and patients; and systemic factors like productivity pressures that prevent providers from exploring all investigative options or from consulting other providers. In some of the cases ECRI analysed, test results were not reviewed quickly enough by the provider who ordered them, or results were never communicated to the patient themselves. Referrals to specialists or requests for additional consultations can complicate the process, presenting more potential failure points.

Although any patient can experience diagnostic error, women and racial and ethnic minorities are at greater risk, with one study pointing to a 20 to 30% increase in the likelihood they are misdiagnosed. This is due to many factors, including providers’ explicit or implicit biases; race-based biases in medical algorithms; barriers to care and insurance access; and communication barriers.

Although most of the diagnostic process is out of the patients’ control, Schabacker shared tips for patients seeking to improve the likelihood they get a prompt and accurate diagnosis.

“It is important patients ask questions to understand why their doctor is ordering tests, and are those tests urgent,” said Schabacker. “Schedule your appointments and tests quickly and follow up with your provider if you’re awaiting results. If possible, ask a family member or friend to join you in important appointments, to help ask questions and take notes.”

ECRI’s report identifies strategies healthcare organisations can execute to improve diagnostic safety, centred on the total systems safety approach and human-factors engineering.

“The problem of diagnostic safety comes down to the lack of a systems-based approach. Since there are multiple potential failure points, a single intervention is insufficient,” warned Schabacker.

Read press release

Source: ECRI, 5 September 2024

World Patient Safety Day, organised by the World Health Organization (WHO), takes place on Tuesday 17 September 2024. The theme of this year’s event is ‘Improving diagnosis for patient safety’. Leading up to the day we will be publishing case studies, opinion pieces and patient experiences focused on diagnostic safety. Find out more here.

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Lucy Letby inquiry set to begin amid continued doubts over convictions and a fresh attempt at appeal

 The public inquiry into what happened when Lucy Letby murdered seven babies at a hospital starts this week amid a growing debate on the evidence used to convict the nurse.

Letby was sentenced to 15 whole life orders after she was convicted of murdering seven babies and attempting to murder seven others at the Countess of Chester Hospital following two trials.

On Tuesday, an independent statutory inquiry, called the Thirlwall Inquiry, begins to specifically explore what happened at the time of the crimes.

It begins, however, at a time of growing debate around scientific evidence used to convict Letby, 34, which has led to questions over whether the hearings should take place.

In a letter to ministers last month, a group of 24 neonatal experts said they feared a narrow scope for the inquiry based on Letby’s convictions could lead to “a failure in understanding and examining alternative, potentially complex causes for the deaths, thus missing important lessons”.

The terms of reference for the inquiry are the experience of the hospital for the parents of the babies, the conduct of those working at the hospital over the Letby and the effectiveness of NHS management across the country.

However, the concerns raised by some over Letby’s convictions have impacted the families of the babies.

Tamlin Bolton, who represents the families of six victims, said: “I can’t stress enough how upsetting that has been for all of the families that I represent.

“And they have thought about so many ways in which they can try to address that and deal with it and make sure they put their voice across. But of course they’re restricted by wanting to keep themselves confidential and private.”

She said it was important to highlight that this week’s inquiry was focussed on the “duty of candour” between patients and hospitals, rather than the criminal convictions “which are final”.

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Source: The Independent, 9 September 2024

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London inquests begin into hospital deaths of babies from contaminated feed

A mother whose premature baby died in hospital after receiving contaminated intravenous food has told her son’s inquest it was “the worst experience a parent could have”.

Yousef Al-Kharboush was nine days old when he died at St Thomas’ hospital in London on 1 June 2014 after developing sepsis from liquid food infected with bacteria called Bacillus cereus.

He was one of 19 premature babies who became infected in a major outbreak across nine hospitals in 2014.

The inquests into Yousef’s death, as well as those into two other babies who died in separate outbreaks involving contaminated feed – one-month-old Oscar Barker, who also died in June 2014, and three-month-old Aviva Otte, who died in January 2014 – began on Monday at Southwark coroner’s court.

The senior coroner, Dr Julian Morris, said his role was not to find blame but to identify the babies and how they died. The coroner revealed he was thinking of taking the unusual step of issuing a prevention of future deaths notice, a legal warning to one or more public or private bodies that they should take specific action to avoid any more deaths occurring in similar circumstances. Morris said: “The other duty I have to consider is whether to provide a prevention of future death report – that’s something I will consider as we hear the evidence over the next couple of weeks.”

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Source: The Guardian, 9 September 2024

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‘Unrealistic’ new targets set for cancer tests

New activity targets set for community diagnostic centres this month will not be met on current staffing levels, experts have warned.

NHS England issued the new guidance for  community diagnostic centres, which sets out the new “minimum activity levels”  target for the first time, last week.

Large CDCs must carry out 60,000 tests annually, and for standard centres, the target is 50,000, while “spoke” sites will be required to conduct 25,000 tests. Primarily, CDCs’ tests are for cancers.

The focus on the targets in previous guidance, set out in 2022, was on what type of tests each CDC was required to deliver, such as CT and MRI scans, ultrasound and plain X-ray.

Society of Radiographers president Richard Evans said that while having a “clear set of metrics” for CDCs was welcome, the new targets would not be met on “current staffing levels”.

The Royal College of Radiologists president Katharine Halliday said the targets were “ambitious” but ultimately “unrealistic”.

The NHS Confederation also said it was “concerned there are not enough staff to continue to ramp up capacity” at CDCs.

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Source: HSJ, 10 September 2024

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Plan to hit 18-week NHS wait target 'set to fail'

The government’s plan to tackle the hospital backlog in England will fail without a fundamental reform in how services work, health leaders say.

Labour aims to increase the number of appointments and operations done each week by 40,000, to help hit the 18-week waiting time target.

But NHS Confederation research found that would deliver only about 15% of the extra capacity needed to get back to reaching the target, which has not been hit since 2006.

It called for a wider transformation of hospital care, including greater use of digital technologies to improve productivity.

The warning comes ahead of the release of a government review of NHS performance later this week.

Led by NHS surgeon and independent peer Lord Ara Darzi, the review was ordered by Health Secretary Wes Streeting shortly after the election, to help identify the biggest barriers to improving waiting times.

Sources close to the review said it would be a warts-and-all report, including criticism about the lack of productivity in some areas.

There will also be a warning about the state of children's health, and how that has deteriorated in the past decade.

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Source: BBC News, 8 September 2024

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Cardiovascular health has been going in the wrong direction, says NHS review

Progress tackling cardiovascular diseases stalled under the Conservatives and is now in decline, a damning review into the NHS will find this week.

A “warts and all” probe into the health service ordered by health secretary Wes Streeting is to say cardiovascular health has been going in the wrong direction, with the British Heart Foundation describing the picture as “extremely concerning”.

Former health minister Ara Darzi, who has carried out the review, is expected to say: “Once adjusted for age, the cardiovascular disease mortality rate for people aged under 75 dropped significantly between 2001 and 2010.

“But improvements have stalled since then and the mortality rate started rising again during the Covid-19 pandemic.”

And, in its own submission to the investigation, the British Heart Foundation said: “We are extremely concerned that the significant progress made on heart disease and circulatory diseases (CVD) in the last 50 years is beginning to reverse. The number of people dying before the age of 75 in England from CVD has risen to the highest level in 14 years.”

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Source: The Independent, 8 September 2024

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"Our sons died – we want mental health inquiry to bring change"

For mothers Melanie Leahy and Lisa Morris, the long wait for a full public inquiry into the deaths of mental health patients in Essex is finally over.

Today Baroness Lampard will open fresh proceedings examining the deaths of inpatients under the care of successive NHS trusts over 23 years. The findings could have implications for mental healthcare nationally.

The Lampard Inquiry has got under way, examining deaths at NHS-run children and adult inpatient units in Essex between 2000 and 2023.

Baroness Lampard, who is leading proceedings, said the inquiry was "of the gravest concern and significance".

She warned the number of deaths was expected to be "significantly in excess" of the 2,000 figure previously reported.

Among those who have lost their lives is Ms Leahy's son, Matthew, who was found unresponsive at a unit now operated by Essex Partnership University Trust (EPUT) in 2012.

When asked what she wants from the inquiry, her answer is simple - "no more deaths".

Twenty-year-old Matthew had been taken to the Linden Centre in Chelmsford after being detained under the Mental Health Act.

He had been under the care of the Early Intervention in Psychosis team operated by one of EPUT's predecessor organisations, the North Essex Partnership NHS Trust (NEP).

Days before his death he reported he had been raped while in the unit, but following a visit the police took no further action.

But staff did not follow the trust's own policy following the allegations and it emerged his care plan had been falsified. It was written after his death.

His mother says she wants the inquiry to use its enhanced powers to obtain documents that she has still not seen.

"There's things like internal investigations, internal statements. I've never read them. There are documents that I've never been privy to and they need to be produced now," she says.

"It's been a battle to get this far."

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Source: BBC News, 8 September 2024

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‘I grieve for the person I was before' - Covid inquiry to begin new phase

The public inquiry into the pandemic will start 10 weeks of hearings on Monday looking at the impact on patients, healthcare workers and the wider NHS.

Covid patients have been admitted to hospital more than a million times in the UK since the virus emerged in 2020, while countless others have had care for other conditions disrupted.

The third stage of the inquiry, external will also examine the impact on NHS staff, the use of masks and PPE in hospitals, the policy of shielding the most vulnerable and the treatment of Long Covid.

And for the first time, the stories of more than 30,000 healthcare staff, patients and relatives will form part of the material entered into evidence.

“It was absolutely horrendous. We were really struggling, having to scrounge around for masks and gloves,“ says Mandi Masters, a community midwife from Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire.

At that early stage the NHS was, she says, “working in the dark” as the virus spread from China to Italy and then to the UK.

Later Mandi caught Covid herself – she is convinced at work – and ended up in hospital on oxygen for three weeks.

“My husband took me to A&E but had to leave me there, turn around and walk away,” she says.

“The news was coming out on how many health professionals were dying of Covid, but I was just too poorly to care at that point,” she says.

“Looking back, I have to admit, it was extremely frightening.”

Mandi, 62, has now returned to work part-time, but still struggles to catch her breath after a short walk.

Every cold or chest infection “wipes her out” and she “grieves for the person I was before Covid”.

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Source: BBC news, 9 September 2024

Related reading on the hub:

The pandemic – questions around Government governance: a blog from David Osborn

Respiratory protective equipment: An unequal solution for healthcare workers? A blog by David Osborn

Raising concerns about PPE and ventilation as a Junior Doctor, a blog by Lindsay Fraser-Moodie

PPE guidance continues to put staff and patients at risk, by Dr David Tomlinson

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Great Ormond Street apologises after children suffered ‘severe harm’ under surgeon

A leading NHS children’s hospital is reviewing the care 721 patients received after an investigation found that children treated by one of its surgeons came to “severe harm” during limb reconstruction operations.

Great Ormond Street hospital (Gosh) in London has offered its “sincere apologies” to children who have suffered what the Sunday Times reported was in some cases lifelong damage.

Some of the children were left with one leg up to 20cm shorter than the other, the paper reported, while others are still in chronic pain years after their treatment, and one had a limb amputated – an outcome that experts said later could have been avoided.

An external review of the care of 39 of the 721 patients has found that 13 came to “severe harm”, another nine suffered “low/moderate harm”, while two cases have been referred for peer review, and the other 15 experienced no harm.

The children are reported to have been treated byYaser Jabbar, a consultant orthopaedic surgeon. Jabbar’s behaviour became a concern after the hospital asked the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) in 2022 to investigate the performance of its paediatric surgery department and patient outcomes, after staff and families voiced concerns about the quality of care it provided.

A spokesperson for Gosh said in a statement: “As part of the review, the RCS raised concerns around the practice of a surgeon who no longer works at the trust, and other practice within the service. We are taking these concerns incredibly seriously.

“We have contacted all patients of the surgeon and a group of independent experts from other paediatric hospitals are reviewing the care of all the patients of this surgeon. We are incredibly sorry for the worry and uncertainty this review may cause them.”

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Source: The Guardian, 8 September 2024

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