Jump to content
  • articles
    9,899
  • comments
    84
  • views
    12,585,395

Contributors to this article

About this News

Articles in the news

Nottingham placenta error hampered baby death probe - coroner

A coroner says an investigation into the death of a newborn baby at a hospital was compromised by the way the placenta was dealt with.

Quinn Lias Parker was born at Nottingham's City Hospital in July 2021 but died two days later from multiple organ failure.

It later emerged the placenta was dissected by pathology staff when it should have been preserved.

Hospital bosses said procedures had since been revised.

An inquest into Quinn's death, held in April, returned a narrative verdict. 

After Quinn's birth, Ms Studencki's placenta was sent from the hospital's maternity unit to pathology, where it was dissected - meaning it was cut up for examination. 

But Dr Elizabeth Didcock, assistant coroner for Nottinghamshire, said the dissection meant the post-mortem examination was compromised.

In a prevention of future deaths report, she detailed how Quinn was born in a "poor condition" and there was a "high probability that he would not survive" and therefore "thought needed to be given to the preservation of the placenta" to ensure it could be used in an examination.

"It is not clear to me exactly how the placenta was cut into after Quinn's death without discussion with the coroner," she said.

"What is clear is that the outcome has been highly detrimental to the independent investigation by the coroner and other agencies investigating the circumstances of this case.

"This death follows a number of similar early neonatal deaths in Nottingham, where the placenta has not been retained, and therefore key information regarding placental pathology has been lost."

Read more
 

Nottingham maternity: Dozens of baby deaths after numerous errors made

An investigation by The Independent and Channel 4 has found dozens of babies have died on the maternity wards at Nottingham hospitals as a result of poor care. 

The special report tells how families have not had their concerns properly investigated nor has the hospital attempted to learn from previous mistakes. 

Nottingham NHS is now facing dozens of clinical negligence claims by grieving families, with the trust estimated to have already paid out £91m in damages and legal costs.  

Read full story.

Source: The Independent, 30 June 2021

Read more

Nottingham maternity units set to miss investigations deadline

Bosses at Nottingham's crisis-hit maternity units are set to miss a deadline for clearing a backlog of incomplete "serious incident" investigations.

Nottingham University Hospitals Trust (NUH) has 53 outstanding maternity incidents yet to be investigated.

The trust had said it aimed to complete investigations by December 23.

But director of midwifery Sharon Wallis says they have not progressed as quickly as she had hoped.

The Local Democracy Reporting Service said the trust has managed to clear a number of those incidents - but it declared another nine in September and October.

An independent review team, led by senior midwife Donna Ockenden, is examining dozens of baby deaths at the trust.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 25 November 2022

Read more

Nottingham maternity scandal: Government rejected proposed inquiry chair as ‘too independent,’ claims Jeremy Hunt

The former health secretary Jeremy Hunt has claimed the government snubbed bereaved families’ requests for Donna Ockenden to chair a review into maternity services in Nottingham as she is “too independent”.

Hundreds of families involved in the Nottingham maternity scandal review have called for Ms Ockenden, chair of the Shrewsbury maternity scandal inquiry, to take over the investigation.

NHS England had attempted to appoint a former healthcare leader, Julie Dent to chair the review. However, following pressure from families not to accept, Ms Dent announced shortly after she would be declining the role.

Following the families’ calls for Ms Ockenden, Mr Hunt, chair of the government’s health committee, said on Wednesday: “I can’t see any other barriers to appointing her but sounds like she still won’t be. For some reason the Department of Health appears to think she is too independent – which is of course precisely why Nottingham families do have confidence in her. It feels like another own goal.”

Families involved in the Nottingham maternity review, which will now cover almost 600 cases, have said they’ve been left in limbo by NHS England after if informed them of an interim report which has been completed by the review team.

This follows several letters from families to health secretary Sajid Javid raising concerns over the review and calls for it to be overhauled.

Speaking with The Independent, a couple whose son died under the care of Nottingham University Hospitals Foundation Trist said: “The key to successful long term change is developing a relationship with harmed families, built on trust, sensitivity and understanding. The current review does not command this. The relationship is untenable.”

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 26 May 2022

Read more
 

Nottingham maternity scandal: families want independent inquiry

More than 20 families have said they want a completely independent inquiry into maternity services at Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust.

One mother, Hayley Coates has said her baby was delivered with forceps, a fractured skull and was starved of oxygen, suffering major brain injuries after a very difficult labour. An inquest this year found serious failings in the service Hayley received after her baby Kaylan, died of an infection a week later. 

"I was pushing and pushing and nothing was happening. I kept saying the baby isn't coming and I need to go for a Caesarean, but staff kept saying I was going to have the baby naturally," Hayley has said. 

NUH chief executive Tracy Taylor has said, "We apologise from the bottom of our hearts to the families who have not received the high level of care they need and deserve, we recognise the effects have been devastating".

Read full story.

Source: BBC News, 22 July 2021

Read more

Nottingham maternity scandal: Donna Ockenden to chair new review in victory for families

Donna Ockenden, the midwife who investigated the Shopshire maternity scandal, has been appointed to lead a review into failings in Nottingham following a dogged campaign by families.

The current review will be wound up by 10 June after concerns from NHS England and families that it is not fit for purpose.

It was commissioned after revelations from The Independent and Channel Four News that dozens of babies had died or been brain-damaged following care at Nottingham University Hospitals Foundation Trust.

In a letter to families on Thursday, NHS England chief operating officer David Sloman said: “I want to begin by apologising for the distress caused by the delay in our announcing a new chair and to take this opportunity to update you on how the work to replace the existing Review has been developing as we have taken on board various views that you have shared with us.”

“After careful consideration and in light of the concerns from some families, our own concerns, and those of stakeholders including in the wider NHS that the current Review is not fit for purpose, we have taken the decision to ask the current Review team to conclude all of their work by Friday 10 June.”

“We will be asking the new national Review team to begin afresh, drawing a line under the work undertaken to date by the current local Review team, and we are using this opportunity to communicate that to you clearly.”

Ms Ockenden said: “Having a baby is one of the most important times for a family and when women and their babies come into contact with NHS maternity services they should receive the very best and safest care."

“I am delighted to have been asked by Sir David Sloman to take up the role of Chair of this Review and will be engaging with families shortly as my first priority. I look forward to working with and listening to families and staff, and working with NHS England and NHS Improvement to deliver a Review and recommendations that lead to real change and safer care for women, babies and families in Nottingham as soon as possible.”

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 26 May 2022

Read more

Nottingham maternity scandal hospital data was ‘maliciously’ deleted, police say

A computer file containing the details of cases linked to the NHS’s largest maternity scandal was “intentionally” and “maliciously” deleted, a police investigation has found.

Nottinghamshire Police launched a probe earlier this year after records held by Nottinghamshire University Hospitals Foundation Trust (NUH) and linked to the alleged maternity failings were temporarily lost.

The data was later recovered and 300 more cases are expected to be added to the inquiry into the scandal after a discrepancy was noted by a coroner.

NUH is currently being investigated for potential corporate manslaughter after The Independent revealed babies had died or suffered serious injuries at its maternity units. The investigation into the deleted hospital data is not related to the corporate manslaughter probe.

The trust is also the subject of an inquiry led by top midwife Donna Ockenden, who is investigating the cases of 2,400 families who experienced maternity care at the trust, including deaths and injuries.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 10 June 2025

Read more

Nottingham maternity scandal families make plea to new health secretary

Families affected by the Nottingham maternity scandal have urged the newly appointed health secretary to meet with them before a critical report is published next month.

The major review of care at the Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, led by former midwife Donna Ockenden, encompasses nearly 2,500 families whose lives have been affected by the deaths or injuries of hundreds of babies.

The inquiry is the largest in NHS history and has been ongoing for more than three years.

In a letter sent on Thursday, the affected families stressed to James Murray, who took over from Wes Streeting last week, that listening to their experiences "must remain at the heart of this process".

They wrote: “We believe it is vital that you hear directly from those affected before the review concludes, and we ask that you come to Nottingham to meet families, listen to our experiences, and understand the reality behind this report before the findings are shared with Parliament and the public.”

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 21 May 2026

Read more

Nottingham maternity review set to become UK's largest

A review into failings in maternity care in hospitals in Nottingham is set to become the largest in the UK, the BBC understands.

Donna Ockenden, chair of the inquiry, is expected to announce that 1,700 families' cases will be examined.

She was in charge of the probe into services in Shropshire, which found at least 201 babies and mothers might have survived had they received better care.

The review comes after dozens of baby deaths and injuries in Nottingham and focuses on the maternity units at the Queen's Medical Centre and City Hospital.

So far, 1,266 families have contacted the review team themselves directly and to date, 674 of these have given consent to join it.

But Ms Ockenden has called for a "radical review" to ensure "women from all communities" were being contacted by the trust and "felt confident" to come forward.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 10 July 2023

Read more

Nottingham maternity failings: Hundreds of families contact review team

More than 350 families have already contacted a review team which is examining failings at maternity units in two Nottingham hospitals.

The review was opened on 1 September by Donna Ockenden, who previously led an inquiry into the maternity scandal at Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust.

She will examine how dozens of babies died or were injured in Nottingham.

Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust has apologised for "unimaginable distress" caused by its failings.

More affected families, as well as staff with concerns, have been asked to come forward.

Ms Ockenden said: "We are really pleased with the large numbers of families and staff that have already come forward in the first week of the review, and we actively encourage others to do the same."

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 12 September 2022

Read more

Nottingham maternity boss memo 'total disrespect to families'

A couple whose baby died in Nottingham say they are "furious" at a memo to hospital staff criticising media coverage of the city's maternity units.

Jack and Sarah Hawkins, whose daughter Harriet died in 2016, have led calls for an inquiry into failings.

Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust (NUH) is at the centre of a review into failings at the city's maternity units.

After years of campaigning and an earlier review which was abandoned, experienced midwife Ms Ockenden was appointed in May.

On Tuesday it emerged Ms Wallis had sent a memo to NUH maternity staff which read: "Yesterday, (Monday 11th) Donna Ockenden met with families as part of the new independent review process.

"Some of you will no doubt have seen some of the media fall out."

"Yet again they painted a damning picture of our maternity services, leaving out of their reports the great work that has been done, the improvements that have been introduced and the passion and commitment of all of the staff."

Mr and Mrs Hawkins told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: "It's not just the families and the press ganging up - there is very real concern about safety. For senior leadership to not be saying that they have a problem is beyond us."

Hospital bosses have "wholeheartedly apologised" for offence caused.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 13 July 2022

Read more

Nottingham hospitals: NHS paid out £101m over maternity failings

The NHS paid out tens of millions of pounds over maternity failings at a hospital trust which is the subject of a major inquiry.

Including legal fees, £101m was paid in claims against Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) between 2006 and 2023.

NUH is facing the UK's largest-ever maternity review, with hundreds of baby deaths and injuries being examined.

Experts say lives could be saved if the trust invested more in learning from its mistakes.

The NHS paid the money in relation to 134 cases over failings at the Queen's Medical Centre (QMC) and City Hospital.

The majority - £85m - was damages for families who were successful in proving their baby's death or injury was a result of medical negligence.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 28 February 2024

Read more

Nottingham hospital menopause scheme hailed by staff

Hospital staff in Nottingham have said they are keen to build on the success of its menopause support scheme.

Nottingham University Hospitals Trust (NUH) said 24% of its staff were aged 45-55, the most common age for the condition.

Staff can ask for lighter uniforms, shift changes, more time to complete tasks or access to fans in offices. Advice, awareness training and access to specialist staff are also part of the scheme.

The staff wellbeing team at NUH said they were "inundated" with messages from colleagues who were struggling.

Jenny Good, NUH Staff Wellbeing Lead, said: "We strongly believe that menopause is an issue for everybody. Everyone knows somebody who will go through it.

"We wanted to equip everyone who works at NUH with an awareness of what menopause is.

"We're really proud that we're the first NHS trust to get the accreditation.

"The conversation has opened up."

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 18 December 2022

Read more
 

Nottingham attacks wouldn't have happened if authorities had listened, says family of man killed months earlier

The NHS trust that failed to stop the killer behind the Nottingham attacks in June 2023 has been accused of failing other victims. 

It was a sunny morning in June 2023 as news broke that a major incident had been declared in Nottingham. As the hours went by it emerged three people had been stabbed. 

Students Barnaby Webber and Grace O'Malley-Kumar had been walking home from a night out when they were fatally attacked. School caretaker Ian Coates was heading into work when he was killed.

When he heard the news, Delvin Marriott, says he knew instinctively that the killer of Barnaby, Grace, and Ian would turn out to be a mental health patient and blames the loss of his brother on the same system that allowed paranoid schizophrenic Valdo Calocane to be out on the streets armed with a knife.

In August 2022, Delvin's brother, Rudi Marriott, stabbed his father 75 times in a frenzied attack at home in Nottingham.

The family says they had repeatedly called the police and mental health services about Rudi's violence but their warnings were ignored.

A recent NHS report found that in the four years before Calocane carried out his attacks there were 15 incidents of patients either under the current care of the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust or who had been discharged perpetrating serious violence towards members of the community. Most of the incidents involved stabbings and three cases resulted in fatalities.

Neil Hudgell, a lawyer representing the families, says the public inquiry due to begin into the deaths of the Nottingham attack victims needs to ensure the trust is held accountable for failings.

"I think we've seen tragic story after tragic story where patients, their families, and victims have been let down," he says.

"We need to get to the bottom of why that happened, who's responsible for that and to have some genuine change."

Read full story

Source: Sky News, 17 March 2025

 

Read more
 

Nottingham attack victims failed by ‘every single agency,’ bereaved families say

The victims of the 2023 Nottingham attack were failed by “every single agency”, their families have said as they call on the government to act on failings exposed in a public inquiry.

Emma Webber, the mother of student Barnaby Webber, who was stabbed to death by Valdo Calocane, told a press conference on Monday: “A monster was left at large in the shadows to stalk his prey. For months, we’ve sat through the statutory public inquiry and watched the evidence unfold.

“It has been brutal, bruising, and harrowing beyond measure, but it was so very necessary. Just look at what it has uncovered. Every single agency failed. Every single one. Without exception.

“Mental health services fail to treat and manage. Police repeatedly failed to act. Agencies didn’t talk. Individuals chose to look the other way. Warnings were ignored. People chose not to care or be curious. And the fear of stigma and bias was placed above safety and duty. And when it went wrong, too many closed ranks. Instead of owning their mistakes.”

Failings by both the NHS and police have been exposed throughout the hearings, including the fact that months before the killings, Calocane was discharged by Nottinghamshire Healthcare Foundation Trust’s Early Intervention in Psychosis (EIP) service because he failed to turn up for appointments, and the team had “lost” him.

Calocane had been sectioned four times while under the care of Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust (NHFT), before he was discharged to his GP in 2022.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 8 June 2026

Read more

Not wearing a mask a ‘serious conduct issue’, CEO warns staff

A London acute trust has told its staff they may not be paid for time at home self-isolating if it transpires they were not wearing a mask near someone with coronavirus.

Staff at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital Foundation Trust were told that if they have to stay at home self-isolating because they were not wearing a mask, that time would have to be taken as annual or unpaid leave.

Chief executive Lesley Watts told all staff in an email today, seen by HSJ, that a worker had tested positive for COVID-19, and that four staff members had spent more than 15 minutes with them “without appropriate [personal protective equipment]” and must all now isolate themselves at home for 14 days.

The trust considers it “a serious conduct issue not to wear a mask where you are putting colleagues or our patients at risk – this will be dealt with under our formal processes going forward”, Ms Watts said in the email.

“If you are sent home to isolate for two weeks because you have not worn a mask, I am now informing you that you will be required to take this as annual or unpaid leave. The four staff members “would not be having to go home to isolate if the use of face masks and social distancing had been in place appropriately”.

A Chelsea and Wesminster Hospital spokesman told HSJ: “The guidance around PPE has changed a number of times over the course of the pandemic and we felt it was important to be clear on the trust’s position and to reiterate how seriously we take staff and patient safety."

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 28 August 2020

Read more
 

Not enough pharmacists are aware of the yellow card scheme

Every pharmacist must report adverse drug reactions using the yellow card scheme, says chair of the Community Pharmacy Patient Safety Group, Janice Perkins

Polypharmacy, when different medications are used by an individual at the same time, is becoming increasingly common because people are living for longer and with multiple different illnesses. One study, published in 2018 by the Oxford University Press, found that over half (54%) of those aged 65 years and above who took part in the study had two or more long-term conditions, for which they could have been taking a range of medicines.

Read full story

Source: Community Pharmacy News, 17 February 2020

Read more

Not ‘built in a vacuum’: How Mount Sinai became the 1st to roll out a new Epic tool

In the US, Miami-based Mount Sinai Medical Center is among the first health systems to deploy a new AI-powered tool from Epic as the organisation looks to better serve its Spanish-speaking patient population.

The tool is a Spanish-language version of Epic’s Augmented Response Technology (ART), which uses generative AI to analyse messages sent through MyChart and draft suggested replies for providers to review, edit and send.

The rollout builds on Mount Sinai’s early adoption of the English-language version of ART in 2023, which was driven by a surge in patient portal messages during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Tom Gillette, CIO at Mount Sinai Medical Center, message volume spiked fivefold during that time as patients increasingly turned to digital channels for advice, prescriptions and follow-ups.

“Layer on top of that, more than 60% of Miami-Dade County speaks Spanish, and about 30% of our patient population has indicated Spanish as their preferred language in Epic,” Mr. Gillette said in an interview with Becker’s. “So extending our ART experience into Spanish was a natural next step.”

Mount Sinai worked closely with Epic on the development and testing of the Spanish-language tool, beginning in December 2024. The effort included IT leaders, bilingual physicians and care teams.

“Our clinicians were intimately involved in shaping this,” Mr. Gillette said. “They helped ensure the messages not only translated correctly, but also made sense medically and aligned with our clinical voice.”

While the tool was technically straightforward to deploy, Mr. Gillette emphasised the importance of rigorous validation—particularly in ensuring that clinical responses in Spanish are not just grammatically correct, but clinically appropriate.

“Accuracy was critical,” he said. “We had to be sure the AI wasn’t missing anything or mistranslating medical concepts.”

Beyond translation, the project raised deeper questions about consistency in clinical communication. Mount Sinai’s team engaged in “prompt engineering” to define organisation-wide standards for AI-generated drafts.

“When a patient says, ‘I think I have a UTI,’ one doctor might say, ‘Come in and see me,’ another might suggest an e-visit, and another might just offer advice,” Mr. Gillette said. “So we had to ask: What’s the response we want to start with? What reflects our standard of care?”

Read full story

Source: Becker's Health IT, 8 August 2025

Read more

Northwest Ambulance Service case review published

The National Guardian’s Office (NGO) has published a 'Summary of speaking up learning and actions' in response to the referrals made from the review into the handling of two speaking up cases at Northwest Ambulance Service NHS Trust (NWAS). The review is the product of the NGO’s engagement process, the central feature of which is the actions the trust will take to address the issues highlighted.

These include explaining the scope of the role of the Freedom to Speak Up Guardians and the issues they can support workers to raise. The trust has also committed to consider their approach to the independence, timeliness and handling of investigations into speaking up matters. They also recognised the need to address perceived attitudes towards female workers.

“The trust has outlined significant steps it is making to ensure these issues are taken seriously, and the learning is embedded in effective improvement actions,” explained Dr Henrietta Hughes, National Guardian for the NHS.

Daren Mochrie, NWAS’ Chief Executive, said, “It’s really important for us to give our staff the confidence to be able to share any concerns and observations safely and confidentially. This creates an open and honest reporting culture within the trust. We welcome the findings of the report and are now putting the learning from this into action to even further improve our reporting system.”

Source: National Guardian's Office, 12 September 2019

Read more

Northern Trust radiologist review finds 66 discrepancies

A review of the work of a former locum consultant radiologist in the Northern Trust has identified major discrepancies in 66 images.

The trust has concluded a review of 13,030 scans and x-rays. The review was launched in June after the General Medical Council raised concerns about the locum consultant radiologist's work.

The highest level of hospital investigation will be carried out into the cases of 17 patients.

More than 9,000 patients were contacted as part of the review.

The review identified six images at level one - a major discrepancy where errors or omissions in reporting could have had an immediate and significant clinical impact for the patients concerned. A further 60 images were level two - a major discrepancy with a probable clinical impact.

"Most of the images categorised as having Level 1 and Level 2 discrepancies are CT scans but some are MRI scans, chest x-rays and other x-rays," said the trust's medical director, Seamus O'Reilly.

"That detailed clinical assessment, which has resulted in 69 patients being called back, was to determine whether any clinical harm occurred as a result of the discrepancies found in the lookback review," 

"I can confirm that following careful consideration, the clinical assessment group has determined that 17 patients should now be part of a Level 3 Serious Adverse Incident (SAI) review."

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 13 October 2021

Read more
 

Northern Ireland: Serious adverse incidents 'likely to be repeated'

Health Minister Robin Swann has announced plans to improve the review process for serious adverse incidents (SAI) in Northern Ireland's health and social care system.

The reviews take place after unintended incidents of harm and ensure improvements are made.

The Regulation and Quality Improvement Authority (RQIA) was commissioned to examine the system's effectiveness. It found the process was not "sufficiently robust".

In the RQIA report, the independent body found that "neither the SAI review process nor its implementation is sufficiently robust to consistently enable an understanding of what factors, both systems and people, have led to a patient or service user coming to harm".

It added: "The reality is that similar situations, where events leading to harm have been inadequately investigated and examples of recognised good practice have not been followed, have been and are likely to be repeated in current practice."

It identified failures in the SAI procedure, including failures to:

  • Answer patient and family questions.
  • Determine where safety breaches have occurred.
  • Achieve a systemic understanding of those safety breaches.
  • Design recommendations and action plans to reduce the opportunity for the same or similar safety breaches in future.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 7 July 2022

Read more

Northern Ireland: No shows to health appointments costing thousands

Patients who fail to turn up for surgical day case procedures are costing the health service thousands of pounds.

It is a problem across Northern Ireland's five health trusts.

Over a 10-month period in the South Eastern area 14,000 patients did not attend or cancelled review appointments on the day they were due to turn up.

Assistant Director of Elective Surgery at the South Eastern Trust Christine Allam said it was "frustrating".

The South Eastern trust review showed between April 2022 and January 2023, 7,755 people did not attend or cancelled new outpatient appointments on the day.

During the same period, 14,003 or 10% of patients didn't show for review appointments.

Ms Allam said the situation was "frustrating for those patients who are waiting to be seen".

"Those slots where people don't turn up are lost capacity because we haven't been given notice - and this only lengthens the waiting lists," she added.

It is a problem that all health trusts are experiencing.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 24 May 2023

Read more

Northern Ireland: New ED consultants will strengthen under pressure workforce, says minister

The health minister has said the recruitment of up to 26 emergency medicine consultants will help stabilise and strengthen the healthcare workforce in Northern Ireland.

The Department of Health said some of the consultants are already in post, with the others set to begin in their roles across all five health trusts by the end of the year.

It said funding for the new posts comes from reducing spending on locum doctors in emergency departments and that it comes as part of work to find roles for newly-qualified consultants in the health system.

Mike Nesbitt said everyone was "acutely aware of the very significant pressures" on emergency departments.

"Both staff and patients want us to do all we can to alleviate those pressures and that's been a central focus for my department and trusts in recent months."

Prof Lourda Geoghegan, deputy chief medical officer, said she was "very encouraged" by early reports on the impact of the new consultants, who had not only helped reduce locum spending but also increased the "presence of senior decision-making in emergency departments".

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 27 May 2025

Read more

Northern Ireland: Medics who withhold information 'should face court'

Healthcare staff who deliberately withhold information should face criminal prosecution in cases involving patient safety and deaths, according to Northern Ireland's human rights commissioner.

In her first public interview on duty of candour, Alyson Kilpatrick told BBC News NI there was an obligation on doctors to be fully truthful in order to protect lives.

A duty of candour is an onus on staff to be open and transparent with patients and families when mistakes are made in a patient's care.

However, the British Medical Association (BMA) does not agree that criminal sanctions should be linked with a duty of candour, and has said it would go against creating a culture of openness and transparency.

Alan Roberts, whose daughter's death was examined by the Northern Ireland hyponatraemia inquiry which found there had been a "cover-up" into how she died, said doctors must be legally bound to tell the truth.

Claire Roberts was one of five children whose deaths at hospitals in Northern Ireland were examined by the 14-year-long inquiry. It was heavily critical of a health service it deemed to be "self-regulating and unmonitored".

Mr Roberts said "the public will be shocked to find there is no legal binding duty on a doctor to tell a patient when there have been failures or when they've been at fault".

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 25 June 2024

Read more

Northern Ireland: Forming an Executive is vital to protect patients

Nursing leaders are to write to Northern Ireland's Secretary of State Brandon Lewis over the failure to establish an Executive and the risk this poses to patients.

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) congress has passed a motion calling for all political parties and the UK Government to commit to the immediate formation of a fully functioning Executive and Assembly.

Fiona Devlin, chair of the RCN Northern Ireland board, brought the matter to the congress and said the move represents the deep level of concern in the profession.

“There is a responsibility to speak up when patients are coming to harm,” she said.

“The health service is about to completely tip over the edge. We felt we did everything we could to communicate our concerns before the elections, and since then, nothing has changed.

“The system is crumbling minute by minute, we have the worst waiting lists in the UK, our emergency departments are completely overstretched, primary care and the independent sector are in crisis.

“Patients can’t be decanted out of ambulances into emergency departments because there’s no room in the hospitals and they’re dying in the back of ambulances.

Read full story

Source: Belfast Times, 8 June 2022

Read more
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.