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Autistic girls much less likely to be diagnosed, study says

Females may be just as likely to be autistic as males but boys are up to four times more likely to be diagnosed in childhood, according to a large-scale study.

Research led by the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden scrutinised the diagnosis rates of autism for people born in Sweden between 1985 and 2020. Of the 2.7 million people tracked, 2.8% were diagnosed with autism between the ages of two and 37.

They found that by the age of 20, diagnosis rates of men and women were almost equal, challenging previous assumptions that autism is more common among males.

“Our findings suggest that the gender difference in autism prevalence is much lower than previously thought, due to women and girls being underdiagnosed or diagnosed late,” said the lead author, Dr Caroline Fyfe.

The research calculated that in childhood, boys were diagnosed on average nearly three years earlier than girls – the median age at diagnosis was 15.9 for girls, but 13.1 for boys. Overall, boys were three to four times more likely than girls to be diagnosed with autism under the age of 10, although girls were found to “catch up” by the time they were 20, owing to a rapid increase in autism diagnosis during adolescence.

“These observations highlight the need to investigate why female individuals receive diagnoses later than male individuals,” the authors conclude.

Patient and patient advocate Anne Cary, writing in a linked editorial, said the research supported arguments that it was “systemic biases in diagnosis, rather than a true gap in incidence” that were behind the discrepancy in diagnosis rates.

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Source: The Guardian, 4 February 2026

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Period blood test could offer less invasive alternative to cervical screening

Testing period blood for signs of cervical cancer could be an accurate and convenient way of screening for the disease, researchers say.

The current NHS test involves a nurse or doctor taking a sample of cells from the cervix - but a third of women invited for screening do not attend.

A study of the new test, which can be carried out at home, used blood collected on a cotton strip attached to a standard sanitary pad.

Cervical cancer charities say finding new and potentially gentler ways of testing for the disease is encouraging and could improve access, although it is still early days for this research.

The NHS is already sending at-home test kits to women in some areas of England who have missed several cervical screening appointments. These DIY test kits containing a vaginal swab will be sent out more widely at some point this year.

Testing period blood would be an even less invasive option, say the Chinese researchers behind the new study in the journal The BMJ, external, adding it could be "a robust alternative" to current methods.

Five million women are not up to date with the test, research shows, and there are many reasons why - including fear, pain and discomfort.

"Cervical screening can be difficult for some women for many reasons, like if they have had a bad previous experience, they are menopausal, they have a physical or learning disability, cultural barriers, or are a survivor of sexual violence," says Athena Lamnisos from charity The Eve Appeal.

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Source: BBC News, 5 February 2026

Related reading on the hub:

Top picks: 12 resources about improving access to cervical screening - Patient Safety Learning's Top Picks - Patient Safety Learning - the hub

 

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Trust bosses clash over ‘car park care’

Ambulance service leaders have clashed with a large hospital trust for putting “pressure” on its crews to deliver “car park care” while patients wait to be admitted.

The row has even resulted in senior figures from one provider – University Hospitals Birmingham Foundation Trust – suggesting the West Midlands ambulance medical director was “compromising his registration” by resisting it, according to meeting minutes published last week as part of January’s board meeting papers. 

West Midlands Ambulance Service University Foundation Trust said it is battling pressure, chiefly from UHBFT, to allow “treatment of patients by [emergency department] staff in [the] rear of ambulance, or patients being treated in ED and put back on ambulance” after receiving initial treatment, such as catheterisation or infusion.

Minutes of the WMAS quality governance committee, reporting on one meeting between senior leaders about the issue, said: “UHB did challenge whether the WMAS medical director [Richard Steyn] is compromising his registration by not allowing them [ED staff] to provide care in the back of the ambulance.”

WMAS “should not be supporting the requests from the hospital to develop standard operating procedures and procedures for the treatment of patients in the ambulance”, according to the minutes published last month of a committee meeting that took place in November. 

Doing so, it said, risked “this [becoming] the ‘norm’ whereby the ambulances will be used as an additional cubicle and whilst doing this our patients are dying”.

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Source: HSJ, 5 February 2026

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Coroner warning to pregnant woman over drug used to treat migraines after baby death

A coroner has warned against a type of medication that can be used to treat migraines during pregnancy after the death of a four-day-old baby.

On 13 November 2024 in Sunderland, Baby Avery Hall, died with lung damage, low oxygen levels and reduced blood flow – complications known to arise when prescription drug Candesartan is used throughout pregnancy, particularly in the second and third trimester.

Avery’s development in pregnancy was compromised by reduced amniotic fluid, leading to poor lung development and impairment of urine production by the kidneys.

His mother was prescribed Candesartan, a medication that relaxes blood vessels, to treat her recurring migraines before she became pregnant.

But in April 2024 when she fell pregnant, doctors gave her “unclear and indecisive advice”, and she was not told specifically to stop using Candesartan, despite the known risks.

David Place, a senior coroner for the City of Sunderland, issued a prevention of future deaths report on Monday. He concluded that Avery died from complications known to arise when Candesartan is used throughout pregnancy and that “action should have been taken”.

“His mother had continued to use this medication which had been prescribed to her since 2022 being unaware of the risks it posed due to a combination of unclear and indecisive advice at the outset and no additional advice about the safety of the medication from clinicians involved in her antenatal care,” Mr Place said.

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Source: The Independent, 3 February 2026

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Hospital told to improve safety probes a decade after baby deaths

A hospital in East Ayrshire has been ordered to improve the way it handles patient safety incidents in its maternity unit, almost 10 years after it was the centre of an investigation into baby deaths.

The report from Healthcare Improvement Scotland (HIS) made 16 requirements for improvement at the unit in Crosshouse University Hospital, near Kilmarnock, including for delays women faced when they contacted the triage unit.

It said some staff were reluctant to report patient safety events, and reviews into incidents took too long to the detriment of families.

NHS Ayrshire and Arran said it is committed to ensuring patients receive safe and dignified care at all times.

In 2016, a review was ordered into failures of care at the hospital after BBC Scotland News revealed there had been six "unnecessary" baby deaths at the hospital. NHS Ayrshire and Arran was told to improve the way it investigated adverse events.

Last year, the Scottish government said it would carry out a national review of maternity care after another BBC investigation revealed ongoing safety concerns across several maternity units.

In total, the latest report made two recommendations and 16 requirements.

Other areas for improvement include flushing of infrequently used water outlets and improvements in the cleanliness of patient equipment.

The HIS report also highlighted 10 areas of good practice including "positive and respectful" interactions between staff and women, families and babies and that staff felt well supported in an under-pressure environment.

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Source: BBC News, 4 February 2026

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Obesity in pregnancy ‘contributing to avoidable harm’ as doctors issue new warning

Doctors have warned that rising obesity rates among pregnant women are endangering both mothers and babies.

Over a quarter of pregnant women in the UK are now classified as obese.

The Royal College of Physicians (RCP) has urged that this be "recognised as an urgent and growing public health challenge".

Obesity is “contributing to avoidable harm” while also putting increased pressure on NHS maternity services, according to the new report.

The college said there must be “bold, joined-up action” from food policy, education and healthcare to better prevent obesity in general.

The “stigamatisation” of women’s weight also “remains an issue” and should be replaced by non-judgmental care before, during and after pregnancy, experts said.

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Source: The Independent, 4 February 2026

 

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Alleged bullying, harassment and toxic culture at hospital revealed in leaked report

Staff members at Wales' largest hospital have faced disciplinary proceedings after a "toxic culture" leaving some feeling unsafe at work was uncovered.

The leaked Cardiff and Vale health board internal review included reports of "bullying and harassment" and "violent and aggressive" behaviour at a University Hospital of Wales (UHW) department.

The investigation, which was completed in August 2024 but not made public, found "systemic failure at all levels" and "unchecked" poor behaviour at the Cardiff HSDU unit, which is responsible for the sterilisation and decontamination of medical equipment.

The health board said it had acted "robustly and fairly" to deal with the "historic allegations".

It said five members of staff had since been "subject to disciplinary action", and that "leadership oversight, management arrangements and team culture" had also been strengthened.

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Source: BBC News, 3 February 2026

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Three-quarters of cancer patients in England will survive by 2035, government pledges

Three in four cancer patients in England will beat cancer under government plans to raise survival rates, as figures reveal someone is now diagnosed every 75 seconds in the UK.

Cancer is the country’s biggest killer, causing about one in four deaths, and survival rates lag behind several European countries, including Romania and Poland. Three-quarters of NHS hospital trusts are failing cancer patients, a Guardian analysis found last year, prompting experts to declare a “national emergency”.

In a new plan published today, ministers will pledge £2bn to resolve the crisis by transforming cancer services, with millions of patients promised faster diagnoses, quicker treatment and more support to live well.

Some cancer performance targets have not been met by the NHS since 2015. Under the national cancer plan, all three waiting times standards will be met by 2029, ministers will announce.

And, for the first time, the government will commit to ensuring that, from 2035, 75% of patients will be either cancer-free or living well, which means a normal life with the disease under control five years after being diagnosed. Currently, six in 10 survive five years or more.

According to the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), this would mean 320,000 more lives saved over the 10-year plan.

Cancer was “more likely to be a death sentence in Britain than other countries around the world”, said health secretary Wes Streeting, but he was determined to change that. “Thanks to the revolution in medical science and technology, we have the opportunity to transform the life chances of cancer patients.”

“Our cancer plan will invest in and modernise the NHS, so that opportunity can be seized and our ambitions realised. This plan will slash waits, invest in cutting-edge technology, and give every patient the best possible chance of beating cancer.”

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Source: The Guardian, 4 February 2026

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Nearly 23 million extra deaths worldwide by 2030 as aid cuts bite, study says

Nearly 23 million additional deaths are expected by 2030 as a result of countries like the US and UK dramatically cutting their overseas aid, a new report estimates.

The peer-reviewed study, produced by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal) and published in the influential health journal The Lancet, finds that cuts to aid programmes in 93 countries - including 38 in Sub-Saharan Africa - will result in 22.6m extra deaths by 2030.

With that total including some 5.4 million children under the age of five, the findings have been labelled a “humanitarian catastrophe”.

“These findings give a voice to millions of vulnerable people and show the profound moral cost of the zero-sum approach many political leaders are taking,” said Dr Rajiv J Shah, president of The Rockefeller Foundation, which helped to fund the report.

“Though it will take years to adequately assess the full toll of aid cuts, this early projection is an urgent call to action,” added Dr Shah, who is also a former administrator of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which is the agency that managed most American aid programmes before it was closed by Donald Trump last year.

“This humanitarian catastrophe is not inevitable, but preventing it will require all of us to act with urgency,” Dr Shah added.

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Source: The Independent, 2 February 2026

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Revealed: Bid to overhaul key emergency target

National officials are in talks about a major overhaul of the ambulance response time target that covers more than half of emergency calls.

Category 2 is by far the largest group of ambulance incidents, at 51% covering relatively minor concerns up to suspected heart attacks and stroke.

Their formal target response time is 18 minutes. This has rarely been met at a national level, but – in the wake of a huge rise and outcry from 2022-24 – there has been a big improvement over the past year. The NHS is trying to meet a 30-minute recovery target this year, which falls to 25 minutes in 2026-27.

However, ambulance leaders are now suggesting major changes be made to how their providers are measured for Category 2 calls, including putting more weight on care quality indicators and less on response time.

Speaking to HSJ,  Association of Ambulance Chief Executives chair Jason Killens also floated the possibility of splitting Category 2 into more and less urgent incidents, allowing the latter to have a slower response. This has not yet been formally put forward by AACE or discussed with NHSE.

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Source: HSJ, 3 February 2026

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Father-of-three not told of aneurysm before death

A father-of-three died of a brain haemorrhage following failings at the hospital where he worked, health bosses have admitted.

Craig Green, 39 was a catering assistant who worked at the QE and was referred by his GP to the hospital following hearing loss.

He attended an ear, nose and throat emergency clinic on the 1 April 2025.

An MRI scan was later carried out and doctors found an aneurysm in one of the arteries to his brain, which was flagged as a high priority to be reviewed by the neurovascular team at the trust.

However, the referral was never finished and neither Craig Green nor his GP were made aware of the findings.

"What's very hard to understand is that, if he knew, he could've put things in place. He could've spoken to his family," his father, Dennis Green, said.

A spokesperson for the University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Trust said there were failures in communication by their staff over Craig Green's case. The Department of Health said the failure was unacceptable.

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Source: BBC News, 3 February 2026

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Lack of mental health beds contributed to UK teenager’s death, inquest finds

A shortage of mental health beds and poor communication between agencies contributed to the death of a teenage girl on hospital grounds, an inquest has found.

Ellame Ford-Dunn, 16, who had a history of self-harm, died in March 2022 after absconding from an acute children’s ward where she had been put because of a dearth of appropriate mental health beds.

Her family and campaigners say Ellame’s death exposed a mental health system “crumbling at the seams”.

The inquest jury at West Sussex coroner’s court was told that Ellame absconded “multiple times” during her stay at Worthing hospital’s Bluefin ward, which was not a specialist mental health unit.

Jurors concluded the decision to place Ellame there was “inappropriate” and “more than minimally” contributed to her death. They found “inadequate provision” of mental health beds also contributed to her death.

The coroner Joanne Andrews said she would issue a prevention of future deaths report to warn that more children would die unless the inadequate provision of mental health beds was tackled.

Ellame’s parents, Ken and Nancy Ford-Dunn, urged the government to increase funding for mental health services to ensure “other families don’t have to experience the worst thing imaginable”.

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Source: The Guardian, 2 February 2026

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Emergency pneumonia cases surge to half a million a year in England

The number of people requiring emergency care for pneumonia has risen by a quarter over two years to reach more than half a million cases, new figures show, amid warnings that preventable cases are adding pressure on overstretched A&E departments.

Analysis of the most recent NHS England data from between April 2024 and March 2025 found that there were 579,475 cases of pneumonia requiring emergency hospitalisation, and this was likely to have risen further since, according to the charity Asthma + Lung UK. There were 461,995 cases between April 2022 and March 2023.

Pneumonia is the single biggest cause of emergency admissions and is responsible for more than double the number of cases of the next biggest. It can also be deadly: between April 2022 to March 2025 more than 97,000 people died of pneumonia after ending up in hospital.

Dr Andy Whittamore, the clinical lead at Asthma + Lung UK, said: “These alarming figures are the result of respiratory care being neglected and deprioritised for too long.

“Following recommended basic care guidelines for respiratory conditions can save and transform lives. I’ve seen first-hand with my patients the dramatic effect good basic care has on reducing hospital admissions.

“However, too often we’re not getting the basics right and the result is increasing A&E and hospital pressures, rising healthcare costs and people with lung conditions left to deteriorate without support.”

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Source: The Guardian, 3 February 2026

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Mental health hospital paid millions by NHS facing police probe after patient death

A mental health charity that receives £206m a year to care for NHS patients is facing two police probes after the death of a patient and alleged assault of another, The Independent can reveal.

The privately run St Andrew's Hospital, Northampton, which provides more than 400 inpatient beds for patients with brain injuries and mental health conditions such as eating disorders and psychosis, was investigated for alleged corporate manslaughter after a man died there in February 2025. Five people were arrested, but four have since been released with no further action. One person remains on bail for alleged wilful neglect by a care worker.

In a separate police probe, eight care workers have been arrested on suspicion of wilful neglect and ill treatment following allegations of assault made on a patient in July 2025.

The latest investigations come after another corporate manslaughter inquiry, following the death of a teenage girl at the hospital in October 2024, which led to one person being arrested.

Northampton Police said the Crown Prosecution Service had since decided no further action would be taken in that case, and the person arrested had been released with no further action. A report on the incident will be prepared for the coroner ahead of an inquest.

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Source: The Independent, 30 January 2026

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Hospitals ‘must be more curious’ to catch rogue surgeons

Rogue surgeons could be harming patients across England because hospital bosses are unwilling to challenge them, the head of the NHS has warned after the Great Ormond Street scandal.

Sir Jim Mackey, chief executive of NHS England, said he was worried hospital trust boards were not “curious enough” about the standards of care in their hospital and too willing to trust unreliable performance data.

He was responding to revelations last week that almost 100 children were harmed by Yaser Jabbar, a paediatric surgeon, at the world-famous Great Ormond Street Hospital.

The scandal has prompted NHS England to write to medical Royal Colleges warning of “emerging evidence” of more widespread harm from surgical negligence.

Asked directly about the GOSH report at a parliamentary event on Thursday, Mackey said: “Nearly everything that’s gone wrong in my career, from a clinical point of view, lots of people have known about it. But the organisation responsible hasn’t been connected with them [surgeons], curious enough, listening enough, or been acting on it.

“It does come back to the board doing its job, individuals being curious, being willing to challenge, being willing to go to places that they don’t want to go.”

He added: “One of the things we want to really try and do in our work is restore the necessity for boards to have good oversight but also deploy curiosity carefully. Because often behind these things you see a very serious lack of curiosity and acceptance at face value of data, which I’ve learnt in my career you can’t ever do. The data’s poorer now than it’s ever been.”

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Source: The Times, 31 January 2026

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Hospital disruption continues after fire

A fire at Southampton's main hospital has led to more than 200 patients being evacuated from wards and operations cancelled.

A major incident was declared after the blaze broke out in the endoscopy unit, in the west wing of Southampton General Hospital, at about 05:30 GMT.

The hospital said the fire had been contained and no-one had been injured, adding that patients in all affected areas were evacuated to safe areas elsewhere on the site.

In a statement just after 16:30, the hospital said the impact was "significant" with a number of planned operations on Monday being cancelled.

It said: "As part of the emergency response, our staff moved more than 200 patients to other areas of our hospital where they are being cared for.

"Our focus continues to be safe patient care and moving them to other wards and departments across our site."

The statement added: "The impact of the fire has been significant and will limit our ability to fulfil all planned activity tomorrow [Monday]."

Patients were moved to safe areas, including inside the main entrance of the hospital.

Some could be seen in their beds in the hospital's main lobby, which is usually busy with members of the public.

Following the fire, the hospital said its emergency department was diverting patients away unless their condition was life or limb-threatening.

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Source: BBC News, 1 February 2026

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'I get nightmares': Child tells BBC of botched surgery by disgraced GOSH surgeon

A former patient of Yaser Jabbar has spoken to the BBC about his experience with the limb reconstruction surgeon when he was just six years old.

"We saw some mistakes on my leg and we realised something happened wrong", 12-year-old Vivaan Sharma said.

An investigation, published by London's Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) into Jabbar, found widespread evidence of unacceptable practice in the botched operations he carried out.

Jabbar worked at the hospital between 2017 and 2022, providing care to 789 children – 94 of them came to harm, GOSH's report concluded.

"We had to have even more surgeries and more surgeries... this is stuck for life, I've got so many scars on my leg", Sharma shared.

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Source: BBC News, 31 January 2026

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‘Deadly postcode lottery’ restricting new cancer treatments in England, doctors say

Cancer patients are being denied access to cutting-edge treatments on the NHS because of a “deadly postcode lottery” in access, doctors have warned.

Patients in England are missing out on two innovative forms of radiotherapy that are known to be effective against several forms of the disease and are widely available in other countries, due to “red tape” and lack of funding.

The Royal College of Radiologists (RCR) and Radiotherapy UK want Wes Streeting to use the government’s new cancer plan, being published this week, to make them widely available.

They are urging the health secretary to end what they say are “bureaucratic hurdles” that NHS England imposes, through its complex funding and commissioning policies, on hospitals that want to provide stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy (SABR) and molecular radiotherapy (MRT).

Unlocking the potential of the novel treatments would help improve cancer survival, which is poor in Britain by international standards, both organisations said.

Dr Nicky Thorp, the RCR’s vice-president for clinical oncology, said: “A number of innovative cancer treatments exist and are known by cancer doctors to be effective, but they are in only limited use in the NHS in England.

“This means that some cancer patients are missing out on treatments that cancer specialists know are effective and which could treat their cancer in fewer doses with fewer side effects.

“Doctors want to do our best for our patients, so it is incredibly frustrating for us to be in a situation where some patients aren’t getting access to the full range of treatments that are proven to help tackle cancer.”

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Source: The Guardian, 1 February 2026

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NHS patients put at risk by ‘sham investigations’, says ex-CEO of hospital

Patients are being put at risk by NHS bosses launching “sham investigations” into whistleblowers to shut down concerns, a former hospital chief executive who won a £1.4m bullying claim has said.

Dr Susan Gilby took over as chief executive at the Countess of Chester hospital in 2018 after it was rocked by the Lucy Letby case. She was awarded the payout – one of the biggest in NHS history – last month after a tribunal ruled she had been unfairly dismissed after raising concerns about alleged bullying and harassment by the chair of the hospital board.

An employment judge found that board members of the hospital conspired to unfairly exclude her and deleted documents when she launched legal action.

Speaking to the Guardian, Gilby said she had been “traumatised” by the experience and made to feel like a “pariah in the NHS” for refusing to drop her concerns in return for a “non-job”.

“I feel desperately saddened that my NHS career has come to an end in the way it has. It’s had a really deep psychological impact [and] probably taken at least 10 years of working life away from me,” she said.

“It’s been very isolating. People walk away when they realise you’re not willing to play by the NHS playbook and accept the offer to get you out of the situation. Doing that has resulted in being made to feel that I’m a pariah in the NHS.”

Tribunal judges found that Ian Haythornthwaite, the chair of the Countess of Chester hospital NHS foundation trust, worked with three other senior figures to “engineer her dismissal” after Gilby raised a whistleblowing complaint about his “bullying and harassment”.

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Source: The Guardian, 1 February 2026

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My mentally unwell son killed his father. Then the NHS failed us

Tricia Monro places two thick folders on the table with pages of psychiatric evaluations, timelines and dozens of emails asking for help for her son. For years she had been trying to catch him as he fell through the cracks of the mental health system.

She had been warned not to be alone with him, but relented when he asked to have a bath at her house in Hampshire in February last year. What she did not know was that he had just fatally stabbed her ex-husband, Peter, 73.

She said she still “cannot believe” how the tragedy has torn her family apart. “I don’t for a moment excuse what he has done, and I accept that he has to be punished,” she said, adding: “It’s a very lonely place being the parent of a child whose mental health has been deteriorating.”

In December Christopher “Kit” Monro, 30, of Oxford, was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum 12-year term for the murder of his father.

The family believe it could have been prevented if NHS Oxford mental health services and other authorities had better heeded their pleas for help. Instead, his mother says she was left in the dark about issues concerning her own safety and felt failed by those in charge of his care.

Their intervention comes as a public inquiry into the Nottingham attacks in 2023 by Valdo Calocane continues to expose severe failings in the care of dangerous psychiatric patient.

A report commissioned after the murder depicts Monro’s mother as “reluctant” to become involved in her son’s care. She is appalled by that characterisation, detailing her repeated attempts to warn the NHS about Monro’s mental state. “I was anxious, and a lot of times uncomfortable, but I stepped in because there was no one else,” she said.

Monro's sister Lara described attempts to blame her mother, 70, who works for a charity, as “diabolical”. She said: “There was a series of red flags raised in the lead-up to this tragedy. My brother was let down by those whose job it was to support him.”

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Source: The Times, 29 March 2026

 

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Trust to review claims of multiple cases of patient harm by surgeon

A trust is investigating the work of one of its former consultants amid claims the cases of “significantly more than 50 patients” he treated at its main site and a local private hospital should be reviewed for potential harm, HSJ has learned.

South Tyneside and Sunderland Foundation Trust said it had “liaised” with the nearby Spire Washington Hospital to review patients it may need to contact who were operated on by orthopaedic surgeon Leslie Irwin.

Mr Irwin carried out work at both the trust and the local private hospital, where he also treated NHS-funded patients. The emergence of an investigation into Mr Irwin first emerged earlier this month.

And a law firm acting for patients involved has now told HSJ that it believes “significantly more than 50” patients will need to be investigated.

It said the vast majority of the patients involved were NHS-funded. HSJ understands that those cases treated at the private hospital were mostly referred in by STSFT and that a significant number of the relevant procedures were carried out at the trust.

The firm, Slater and Gordon, said it had already received a “significant” number of enquiries, which were “increasing by the day”. In one case, a woman in her 40s underwent 30 procedures over two decades, the firm said.

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Source: HSJ, 29 January 2026

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Streeting: Safety agency will be integrated into ‘failing’ CQC carefully

The health secretary has said the government will approach integrating the NHS’s “successful” safety watchdog into the “failing” Care Quality Commission with “enormous care”.

Speaking at the launch of the Global State of Patient Safety 2025 report in the House of Lords this week, Wes Streeting addressed the recommendations made by NHS England chair Penny Dash in her review of the regulatory bodies involved in patient safety. These included subsuming The Health Services Safety Investigations Branch into the CQC.

Mr Streeting said: “I want to reassure everyone here and beyond that as we proceed with [the Dash review’s recommendations], particularly the integration of HSSIB into the CQC, that we will do so with enormous care.

“The last thing I want to do is to take a successful organisation, merge it with a failing organisation, and to do so would be to the detriment of both.”

HSSIB – originally styled the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch – was established in 2017 while Sir Jeremy Hunt was health secretary to conduct independent investigations into patient safety incidents across the NHS in England.

Maternity investigations were removed from HSSIB’s remit in 2023 and put into the CQC, as the Maternity and Newborn Safety Investigations programme.

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Source: HSJ, 30 January 2025

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USA: More than 75 health systems call for stepped-up oversight of patient data sharing

More than 75 health systems sent a letter to federal officials calling for stronger oversight of nationwide data sharing networks, flagging issues with "bad actors" gaining access to patients' medical information.

The health systems, including AdventHealth, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, The MetroHealth System, NYU Langone, UMass Memorial Health, Stanford Health Care and Sutter Health, are calling for more centralized oversight and governance for the nationwide health data exchange frameworks, including the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA) and Carequality.

The letter, addressed to The Sequoia Project CEO Mariann Yeager and Steve Posnack, deputy assistant secretary for technology policy at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), calls for stepped-up safeguards for data sharing include more rigorous oversight and governance of who gets access to patients' medical information, better monitoring for fraud and more transparency into network activity.

The organizations argue that self-attestation and decentralised oversight, which is the current process, is not sufficient to safeguard patient data. Health systems want more established rules of the road and stronger protections to prevent fraud on the networks. 

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Source: Fierce Healthcare, 29 January 2026

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AI use in breast cancer screening cuts rate of later diagnosis by 12%, study finds

The use of artificial intelligence in breast cancer screening reduces the rate of a cancer diagnosis by 12% in subsequent years and leads to a higher rate of early detection, according to the first trial of its kind.

Researchers said the study was the largest to date looking at AI use in cancer screening. It involved 100,000 women in Sweden who were part of mammography screening and were randomly assigned to either AI-supported screening or to a standard reading by two radiologists between April 2021 and December 2022.

The AI system worked by analysing the mammograms and assigning low-risk cases to a single reading and high-risk cases to a double one by radiologists, as well as highlighting suspicious findings to support radiologists.

Mammography screening supported by AI reduced cancer diagnoses in the years after a breast screening appointment by 12%, according to the research, published in The Lancet. There were 1.55 cancers per 1,000 women in the AI-supported group compared with 1.76 cancers per 1,000 women in the control group.

More than four in five cancer cases (81%) in the AI-supported mammography group were detected at the screening stage, compared with just under three quarters (74%) in the control group, and there were also almost a third (27%) fewer aggressive sub-type cancers in the AI group compared with the control.

Dr Kristina Lång, from Lund University in Sweden and the lead author of the study, said that AI-supported mammography could help detect cancers at an early stage, but that there were caveats.

“Widely rolling out AI-supported mammography in breast cancer screening programmes could help reduce workload pressures among radiologists, as well as helping to detect more cancers at an early stage, including those with aggressive subtypes,” Lång said.

“However, introducing AI in healthcare must be done cautiously, using tested AI tools and with continuous monitoring in place to ensure we have good data on how AI influences different regional and national screening programmes and how that might vary over time.”

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Source: The Guardian, 29 January 2026

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Small risk of severe acute pancreatitis with weight-loss jabs, UK regulator warns

Patients on weight-loss jabs and diabetes injections should be aware there is a small risk of developing severe acute pancreatitis, the UK medicines regulator has said.

About 1.6 million adults in England, Wales and Scotland used GLP-1 medication, such as semaglutide (Wegovy, Ozempic) and tirzepatide (Mounjaro), between early 2024 and early 2025 to lose weight, according to recent research.

Patient information leaflets for Wegovy, Ozempic and Mounjaro list pancreatitis as an “uncommon” reaction, affecting about one in 100 patients.

Acute pancreatitis occurs when the pancreas, a gland located behind the stomach that aids in digestion, becomes suddenly inflamed. Symptoms include severe pain in the abdomen, nausea and fever, with patients often ending up in hospital.

While acknowledging that pancreatitis is rare, on Thursday the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) updated its guidance, after an increase in reports of acute pancreatitis to the agency’s yellow card scheme, which monitors any adverse reactions to medications and medical devices in the UK.

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Source: The Guardian, 29 January 2026

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