Jump to content
  • articles
    9,858
  • comments
    83
  • views
    12,513,887

Contributors to this article

About this News

Articles in the news

Hospital rated ‘inadequate’ after death prompts inspection

A private hospital has been rated ‘inadequate’ by a health watchdog following an inspection prompted by a young patient’s preventable death.

Woodbourne Priory Hospital, in Edgbaston, has had its overall Care Quality Commission rating downgraded from “good” to “inadequate” after inspectors visited in May.

The regulator’s visit was sparked by a prevention of future deaths report into the death of Birmingham University graduate Matthew Caseby, 23, who was placed at the hospital as an NHS-funded patient in September 2020.

Mr Caseby had been detained under the Mental Health Act but managed to escape Woodbourne and died after being struck by a train.

Earlier this year, an inquest concluded his death was contributed to by neglect on behalf of the hospital. 

In April, Birmingham and Solihull coroner Louise Hunt flagged urgent concerns about record keeping, risk assessments and security of courtyard fences with Priory Group and the Department of Health and Social Care.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 22 September 2022

Read more
 

Hospital prosecuted in first-ever case for 'lack of candour' after woman's death

An NHS trust is to appear in court today charged with breaking the law on being open and transparent after a woman’s death in the first ever court case of its kind.

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has brought a criminal prosecution against University Hospitals Plymouth Trust which will appear at Plymouth Magistrates Court tomorrow morning.

The trust is charged with breaching the duty of candour regulations under the Health and Social Care Act 2008 which require hospitals to be honest with families and patients after a safety incident or error in their care. Hospitals are legally required to notify patients or families and investigate what has happened and communicate the findings to families and offer an apology.

The case relates to how the Plymouth trust communicated with a woman’s family after her death which happened after she underwent an endoscopy procedure at Derriford Hospital in December 2017.

The trust was required by law to communicate in an open and transparent way. The CQC has accused the trust of failing to do this.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 22 September 2020

Read more

Hospital porters to strike over ‘diabolical’ treatment by trust

Hospital porters at an acute trust are set to strike over what a union has called “diabolical” treatment.

Around 60 porters at University Hospital Southampton belonging to the Unite union will stage a series of 24-hour walkouts starting on 28 November and then every Monday and Friday throughout December and January.

Unite has said its members have been subjected to “endemic bullying” and “diabolical” working conditions, such as having to inform managers before and after using the toilet, being denied breaks to drink water, and having seating removed.

The union has also alleged that its members have been disciplined for raising concerns about patient safety, understaffing, and the quality of equipment.

Unite regional officer Kate Attwooll said: “The strike action will inevitably cause serious disruption across the hospital, but this is entirely the fault of management; they are well aware of the problems but have failed to take action to prioritise staff and patient safety and dignity.

“Strike action could still be avoided but that would require management introducing the changes needed to end the endemic bullying of porters at UHS.”

Read full story

Source: HSJ, 15 November 2024

Read more

Hospital pays out after bacteria-linked deaths

A hospital trust has paid a "six-figure settlement package" in the case of nine patients following an outbreak of a bacterial infection linked to its water supply.

Three patients died and two of these cases were as a result of complications connected to the outbreak at Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridge, according to lawyers.

Lung transplant patients Karen Starling, 54, of Ipswich, died in February 2020, and Anne Martinez, of Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, died in December 2020.

Eilish Midlane, the hospital's chief executive, said: "Lessons have been learnt [and] regulations revised to seek to avoid a similar occurrence in the UK."

The trust denied liability but resolved each of the claims in out-of-court settlements, which were secured following a civil claim pursued as a group action.

Six further patients suffered serious complications that continue to affect them following the outbreak of Mycobacterium abscessus (M.abscessus), according to legal firm Irwin Mitchell.

Lawyers said the "six-figure settlement package" was agreed in connection with the nine cases.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 20 August 2025

Read more

Hospital patients treated by women doctors are ‘less likely to die’

Hospital patients who are treated by women doctors are less likely to die and to be readmitted, a new study has found.

Research, by UCLA, discovered the health of female patients is more advantaged by treatment from women doctors than it is for men.

The study, published in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine, found the mortality rate for female patients was 8.15 per cent when treated by women physicians in comparison to 8.38 per cent when the doctor was male - which researchers deem a “clinically significant” difference.

Meanwhile, the mortality rate for male patients treated by female doctors was 10.15 per cent - less than the 10.23 per cent rate for male physicians. Researchers unearthed the same pattern for hospital readmission rates.

Professor Yusuke Tsugawa, one of the authors, said patient outcomes between male and female physicians would not be different if the professionals practiced medicine in the same way.

“What our findings indicate is that female and male physicians practice medicine differently, and these differences have a meaningful impact on patients’ health outcomes,” he said.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 22 April 2024

Read more

Hospital patients dying undiscovered in corridors, report on NHS reveals

Patients are dying in hospital corridors and going undiscovered for hours, while others who suffer heart attacks cannot be given CPR because of overcrowding in walkways, a bombshell report from the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) on the state of the NHS has revealed.

So many patients are being cared for in hospital corridors across the UK that in some cases pregnant women are having miscarriages outside wards while other patients are unable to call for help because they have no call bell and are subjected to “animal-like conditions”, said the RCN.

The RCN warned that patients were “routinely coming to harm” and in some cases dying because vital equipment was not available and staff were too busy to give everyone adequate care.

Dr Adrian Boyle, the leader of Britain’s A&E doctors, said the nurses’ testimonies on which the report was based were so horrendous that it “must be a watershed moment, a line in the sand” and must prompt the government to redouble its efforts to get the NHS working properly again.

Boyle, the president of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said: “I am shocked, appalled and so saddened that this is the level of care we as clinicians are being forced to provide to our patients – people who turn to the NHS and its staff when they are most vulnerable and in need.”

The RCN’s 460-page report, based on “harrowing” descriptions given by 5,400 UK nurses of their experience of working in hospitals, sets out how:

  • Patients have died on trolleys and chairs in corridors and waiting rooms in settings where “all the fundamentals of care have broken down.”
  • One nurse had seen “cardiac arrests in the corridor with no crash bell, crash trolley, oxygen, defibrillator … straddling a patient doing CPR while everyone watches on.”
  • Patients are being given drugs, intravenous infusions and, in one case, a blood transfusion in corridors which are cold, noisy and too cramped to allow them to have loved ones present.
  • One nurse had to tell a patient he was dying as other patients were wheeled past and orders were shouted across the unit. They said, “How is it fair to tell someone they are dying in a corridor?”
  • Lack of space means patients also being treated in storerooms, car parks, offices and even toilets.

The report came as Wes Streeting, the health and social care secretary, was forced to defend the government’s record on the NHS in an urgent Commons debate about the intense pressures this winter that have left many hospitals overwhelmed in recent weeks.

Streeting responded to Conservative attacks by telling MPs that corridor care “became normalised in NHS hospitals under the previous government. It is unsafe, undignified, a cruel consequence of 14 years of failure on the NHS and I am determined to consign it to the history books.”

But, he added, while ending corridor care was the government’s ambition, “I cannot and will not promise that there will not be patients treated in corridors next year. It will take time to undo the damage that has been done to our NHS.”

Read the RCN report: On the frontline of the UK’s corridor care crisis

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 16 January 2025

Read more
 

Hospital patients die from starvation and thirst because nurses are over-stretched

It has been revealed that three patients a day are dying from starvation or thirst or choking on NHS wards. 

In 2017, 936 hospital deaths were attributed to one of those factors, with starvation the primary cause of death in 74 cases.The Office for National Statistics data reveals malnutrition deaths are 34% higher than in 2013.

Over-stretched nurses are simply too busy to check if the sick and elderly are getting nourishment. 

However, Myer Glickman from the ONS says the data is not conclusive proof of poor NHS care. He said:“There has been an increase over time in the number of patients admitted to hospital while already malnourished. This may suggest that malnutrition is increasingly prevalent in the community, possibly associated with the ageing of the population and an increase in long-term chronic diseases.”

Yet campaigners say too many vulnerable people are being “forgotten to death” in NHS hospitals and urgent action is needed to identify and treat malnutrition.

In a recent pilot scheme the number of deaths among elderly patients with a fractured hip was halved by simply having someone to feed them. Six NHS trusts employed a junior staff member for each ward tasked with getting 500 extra calories a day into them. More survived and the patients spent an average five days less in hospital, unblocking beds and saving more than £1,400 each.

It wasn’t just the calories though – it helped keep their morale up.

Because, as one consultant said: “Food is a very, very cheap drug that’s extremely powerful.”

Read full story

Source: Mirror, 4 February 2020

Read more

Hospital patient spent nine days in locker room

A woman who feared she was having a heart attack said she spent nine days in a hospital staff room because of a shortage of beds. Zoe Carlin, 23, was admitted to Altnagelvin Hospital in Londonderry in March after experiencing severe chest pain.

She said she spent more than a week in a “locker room” where she had to use a hand bell to call staff during what she described as a “dehumanising” ordeal. The Western Health and Social Care Trust (WHSCT) said it faced "extreme pressures" in its hospital emergency departments but could not comment on individual cases due to confidentiality.

“For the full nine days I was in this alcove,” she told BBC Radio Foyle’s North West Today programme. “It’s basically the nurses' locker room. You can see the nurses’ lockers with their names on them. They [staff] just said there’s not enough beds,” she added. A privacy screen did not fully cover the room’s doorway and she had no access to a private bathroom. She said she was forgotten about at meal times on three occasions.

A spokesperson for WHSCT said, "We are acutely aware of the continuing challenges and extreme pressures not just in our emergency departments but across both of our acute hospital sites with full escalation of beds on all wards and departments. In the Western Trust, when we learn of examples where care falls below the standard we expect, we review the circumstances and explore ways to improve care in the future."

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 11 April 2024

Read more

Hospital patient sent 'whistleblower' letters

A patient who spent months in hospital because of a medical error received anonymous letters alleging safety concerns at the unit that treated her.

Marilyn Smith was diagnosed with tetanus after she was discharged following treatment for a leg injury at Hinchingbrooke Hospital in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire.

 She said she was not asked about her tetanus immunisation status and was discharged from Hinchingbrooke without a booster shot.

A few days later she woke up with trismus, commonly known as lockjaw, and was unable to open her mouth - a symptom of tetanus, which only a handful of people contract in the UK each year. 

She subsequently spent more than 120 days in hospital in Hinchingbrooke, and then Peterborough, when her condition worsened and she was moved to critical care, placed in an induced coma and needed intubation. She said she now struggled to walk.

She received the first anonymous letter, claiming to be from "a group of current and previous A&E staff at Hinchingbrooke", in the post in January after she had been home from hospital for two weeks.

"I wasn't a letter to me, but a letter about me," Ms Smith said.

It described alleged shortcomings in her care.

Two subsequent letters made similar claims and on the same day the third arrived at her house, on 24 February, the BBC also received one giving Ms Smith's name and address and describing the alleged failures in her initial care.

This letter stated "the trust has been ignoring concerns about patient safety" and contained further allegations that related to an individual.

She has since instructed a lawyer to look at her case because, she said, she did not want anybody else to suffer like she had.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 8 March 2022

Read more

Hospital patient had to wait more than 10 days for a bed - as 'unacceptable' crisis laid bare

Around 49,000 A&E patients had to wait 24 hours or more for a hospital bed in England last year, according to NHS figures.

Data compiled by the Liberal Democrats from freedom of information requests shows the longest wait was 10 days and 13 hours.

The party said there were 48,830 "trolley waits" of 24 hours or longer in 2024. That is 19.8% higher than 2023 (40,735) and 57.9% higher than 2022 (30,921).

A "trolley wait" is the time taken for a patient to be transferred to a ward after a decision has been taken to admit them to hospital.

The Lib Dems said the real numbers were likely to be far higher because only 54 out of 141 NHS trusts had provided full data.

The Royal College of Nursing said the figures "only begin to scratch the surface" of a "crisis in corridor care" - and that declining recruitment in nursing was adding to the problem.

General secretary Professor Nicola Ranger said corridor care is "undignified and unsafe" and "must be eradicated".

Read full story

Source: Sky News, 21 April 2025

Further reading on the hub:

Read more

Hospital patient given 'corridor care' for 14 hours

A patient says he felt ignored and that NHS care was lacking after he spent 14 hours on a bed in a hospital corridor.

Ivan Philpotts, 77, from Norwich, was transferred between wards at the Norfolk & Norwich University Hospital (NNUH), having contracted pneumonia.

He said he was left in a bed in a corridor with no access to water, was unable to eat and that his wife was unable to visit.

The hospital said it had experienced a high number of patients last week.

"I felt very vulnerable," Mr Philpotts said. 

"Nobody seemed to be taking any notice of you and you were sitting there, people walking by you.

"I was there from 8.30 in the morning until 9.10 at night before I actually got into a bay. We got no communication whatsoever."

The hospital trust is one of just two in England that has been carrying out a trial of a "corridor care" scheme.

The Royal College of Nursing's eastern regional director Teresa Budrey said: "We're starting to normalise it and that's not OK.

"There are patients who are suffering for hours, without proper privacy or equipment and you've also got nurses dealing with an expanded number of patients.

"We need government minsters and employers to come together for some bigger solutions across the system."

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 6 March 2024

Further reading on the hub:

 

Read more

Hospital patient discharges putting strain on Devon's care sector

Devon care homes say they are being asked to accept patients with Covid-19, flu and other infectious diseases to ease the pressure on local hospitals.

One owner said it felt like the start of the pandemic again, as the safety of care homes was being "compromised".

Devon has some of the longest waits for emergency care in the country, according to NHS figures.

Simon Spiller, owner of The Croft Residential Care Home in Newton Abbot, said since the start of winter the home was being asked to shortcut its assessment process to help ease the blockages in Devon's hospitals.

He said other local care homes have told him they were facing the same pressure.

Mr Spiller said: "We're being encouraged, or really asked, to shortcut our assessment process. Normally, one of our team would go to the hospital to assess people, to really understand their care needs, to ensure they're an appropriate fit for our care home, which specialises in dementia.

"Increasingly, because of the speed they're trying to achieve a discharge, we're being asked to accept people at kind of face value, as presented by the NHS."

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 26 January 2023

Read more

Hospital operating theatres plagued by racist, sexist and homophobic abuse

Racism, sexism, and homophobia is widespread in hospital operating theatres across England, according to an independent report.

In a damning verdict on the atmosphere in some surgical teams, Baroness Helena Kennedy QC said the ‘old boys’ network of alpha male surgeons was preventing some doctors from rising to the top and had fuelled an oppressive environment for women, ethnic minorities and trainee surgeons.

The report was commissioned by the Royal College of Surgeons and lays bare the "discrimination and unacceptable behaviour" taking place in some surgical teams.

Baroness Kennedy told The Telegraph the field of surgery was "lagging behind" society, adding: "It is driven by an ethos which is very much alpha male, where white female surgeons are often assumed to be nurses and black women surgeons mistaken for the cleaner. And this is by the management.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 18 March 2021

Read more
 

Hospital merger confusion blamed for cancer deaths

A ‘leading’ cancer service has reported a series of safety incidents which contributed to patients being severely harmed or dying, HSJ  has reported.

An internal report at Liverpool University Hospitals Foundation Trust suggests the incidents within the pancreatic cancer specialty were partly linked to patient pathways being ill-defined following the merger of its two major hospitals.

The report lists seven incidents involving severe harm or death, and five involving moderate harm. It is not clear how many of the patients died.

The trust was formed in 2019 through the merger of the Royal Liverpool and Aintree acute sites, with the consolidation of clinical services an integral part of the plans. However, there were no formal plans to change the configuration of pancreatic cancer services, which already operated under a “hub and spoke” model.

In one finding relevant to all 12 incidents, the report said: “Patient ownership and clinician accountability (local vs specialist) have not been defined following the merger of the legacy trusts and subsequent service reconfigurations.

“This has contributed to system failures in the provision of timely quality care, particularly in patients with time-critical clinical uncertainty.”

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 5 October 2022

Read more
 

Hospital may have broken law by failing to reveal errors led to boy’s death

Great Ormond Street Hospital may have broken the law by failing to share information with parents that showed its errors had contributed to their son’s death, The Independent understands.

The care watchdog is speaking to Great Ormond Street about its handling of an expert report into five-year-old Walif Yafi in 2017.

It showed that the hospital’s failure to share results that showed a deadly infection had played a role in Walif’s death. But the boy’s parents were only told about the findings after inquiries by The Independent – months after settling a lawsuit with Great Ormond Street in which the trust denied responsibility.

The Care Quality Commission is looking at concerns relating to duty of candour regulations, which require hospitals to be open and honest with families about mistakes made that result in serious harm to patients. Breaching the regulations is a criminal offence and can lead to prosecution.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 7 December 2020

Read more
 

Hospital management criticised over helipad death

A trust failed to identify risks associated with a helipad in one of its car parks, contributing to the death of an elderly woman who was blown over as a heavy search and rescue helicopter came into land. 

The Air Accident Investigations Branch found multiple factors contributed to 87-year-old Jean Langan’s death at Derriford Hospital in Plymouth in March 2022. Ms Langan was on her way to an appointment when she was blown over and another person seriously injured.

Crispin Orr, chief inspector of air accidents, said: “Our in-depth investigation revealed systemic safety issues around the design and operation of hospital helicopter landing sites which need to be addressed at a national level.”

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 2 November 2023

Read more

Hospital leads way in using AI to help patients

A hospital has introduced a new artificial intelligence system to help doctors treat stroke patients.

The RapidAI software was recently used for the first time at Hereford County Hospital.

It analyses patients' brain images to help decide whether they need an operation or drugs to remove a blood clot.

Wye Valley NHS Trust, which runs the hospital, is the first in the West Midlands to roll out the software.

Jenny Vernel, senior radiographer at the trust, said: “AI will never replace the clinical expertise that our doctors and consultants have.

"But harnessing this latest technology is allowing us to make very quick decisions based on the experiences of thousands of other stroke patients.”

Radiographer Thomas Blackman told BBC Hereford and Worcester that it usually takes half an hour for the information to be communicated.

He said the new AI-powered system now means it is "pinged" to the relevant teams' phones via an app in a matter of minutes.

"It's improved the patient pathway a lot," he added.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 7 December 2023

Read more

Hospital launches social care service to reduce ‘astronomical’ delayed discharges

An acute trust is launching its own social care service to reduce the ‘astronomical’ costs of delayed discharges.

Harrogate and District Foundation Trust is among the first NHS providers to branch out into direct social care provision, in what the trust says is a “lift and shift” from the model adopted by Northumbria Healthcare FT.

HDFT is now embarking on a six-month pilot of its new social care service. It comes as around 20 of the trust’s 300 beds are occupied by patients waiting for social care packages on a given day. 

Chief operating officer Russell Nightingale told HSJ  delayed discharges are leading to patients who could have returned home with the right support deteriorating in hospital and ending up in care homes. 

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 23 November 2023

Read more

Hospital launches review of stillbirths

A trust whose maternity care is under scrutiny is launching a review of all stillbirths last year, it has confirmed to HSJ.

Sandwell and West Birmingham Trust (SWBT) confirmed it was due to begin a review of all 2025 cases.

This will include a “comprehensive” review of care provided to identify “themes and learning”.

It will also examine the reviews that staff carried out at the time of the stillbirths – a process which uses the national perinatal mortality review tool (PMRT). There have been concerns about whether those reviews were carried out properly at SWBT.

The new review will be led and hosted by SWBT, but with experts from NHS England, and clinicians from other trusts in the local maternity and neonatal system (LMNS), taking part.

It is the latest in a string of reviews to examine maternity care at SWBT, including the ongoing national investigation by Baroness Amos. The trust’s perinatal mortality has been flagged multiple times as an outlier, but it improved in the most recent data.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 24 April 2026

Read more
 

Hospital IT system warning after 'preventable' death

A coroner has issued a warning over a hospital’s new computer system after the death of a 31-year-old woman.

Emily Harkleroad collapsed on 18 December 2022 and was taken to the University Hospital of North Durham, where she died the next morning from a pulmonary embolism – a clot on the lung.

The assistant coroner for County Durham and Darlington concluded, on balance, that Ms Harkleroad’s death could have been prevented, external. She also noted computer system concerns had been raised by a number of clinicians.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 24 February 2024

Read more

Hospital issues ‘full capacity’ alert days before move to smaller building

A major acute site has issued a ‘full capacity’ alert to staff, just days before the services are due to move into a replacement hospital with fewer beds.

In an email seen by HSJ, medical leaders at the Royal Liverpool Hospital alerted staff to extreme pressures on the site, with ambulances being held outside and “no space” in resuscitation areas.

The RLH currently has around 685 beds, but at the end of this month the services are due to start transferring to the long-awaited new Royal Liverpool, on an adjacent site.

The new hospital has 640 beds, and several frontline staff have told HSJ this is causing significant concern, with the current services under so much pressure.

One senior source at the trust said there has been a push since 2017 to reduce inpatients beds at the current hospital, to try and match the capacity of the new build, but this hasn’t been achieved.

They added: “Surgeons are concerned that their beds will get filled with medical outliers. The whole issue is all the patients who are waiting for social care. It was supposed to have been sorted by now.”

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 13 September 2022

Read more

Hospital Inquiry hears health boss tried to stop whistleblower

The boss of Scotland's biggest health board tried to persuade a top doctor not to blow the whistle about patient safety concerns, a public inquiry has heard.

Dr Penelope Redding, a former clinical director at NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde (GGC), claimed the board's chief executive Jane Grant "urged me not to do it".

Dr Redding was one of a number senior doctors who raised infection control concerns at the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH) in Glasgow.

In a submission to the Scottish Hospitals Inquiry, Dr Redding claimed there was a "profound culture of fear and bullying" at the board which put more people off speaking out.

The inquiry is investigating the construction of the £870m QEUH campus in Glasgow, which includes the Royal Hospital for Children.

It was set up after a number of patient deaths including that of 10-year-old cancer patient Milly Main.

Dr Redding worked as an infection control doctor until 2008. She was involved in the preliminary planning for the QEUH, which opened in 2015, and was a whistleblower before she stepped down as a consultant microbiologist in 2018.

In evidence to the hearing, the retired doctor criticised "a culture of not putting things in writing, in emails, not putting things in minutes, an atmosphere of intimidation and bullying" within the NHS. She said she only felt comfortable speaking out as she was approaching retirement.

A spokesperson for NHS GGC said: "The current Scottish Hospitals Inquiry hearings have yet to hear from various key staff. A number of staff being mentioned during these hearings will also provide evidence and will endeavour to support the Inquiry to fully establish the facts."

Read more about the Scottish Hospitals Inquiry on the hub.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 4 September 2024

Read more

Hospital in meltdown over IT issues

A whistleblower has warned a London hospital is "literally in meltdown" after its IT system was knocked out during last week's heatwave.

Operations at Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital in Lambeth were cancelled after its IT servers broke down in 40C (104F) temperatures on 19 July.

A doctor told the BBC "poor planning" and "chronic underfunding" meant issues remained a week later.

A spokesperson for the hospital said IT issues were "having an ongoing impact".

Without a functioning IT system, staff have returned to paper notes, the doctor said.

The anonymous whistleblower, who works as a doctor at Guy's and St Thomas', said this meant "we see very worrying results, but we don't know where the patients are so we spend ages tracking them down".

"We cannot read any historical notes from patients. Names are being misspelt, so scans are not showing up.

"Each morning, someone hand-delivers a stack of test results to the ward. In there, we received several patient results that don't belong to our ward," the doctor said.

"If we don't recover our shared drives, we risk losing months of research data, if not years."

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 27 July 2022

Read more
 

Hospital in bullying claims did not monitor at-risk patients

A hospital accused of bullying its staff is facing new claims that it failed to act on a leading doctor’s warning about a potentially fatal failure to monitor vulnerable patients, the Guardian newspaper can reveal.

Dr Jonathan Boyle, the UK’s top vascular surgeon, had warned West Suffolk NHS trust that patients at risk of dying from burst aneurysms were not being safely monitored. An IT glitch meant that patients were not followed up to see how soon they would need potentially life-saving surgery.

A doctor at the trust, however, says it initially repeatedly refused to take any action, raising further questions about its management.

The trust initially suggested the problem was the result of senior doctors not keeping up with emails, but later accepted its IT systems were at fault. The hospital was forced to recognise that patients were potentially put at risk and took action only after a whistleblower alerted the NHS regulator.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 5 January 2020

Read more

Hospital has left my daughter in ME agony, claims mother

A mother has said an NHS hospital failed to offer her daughter adequate pain relief in a pattern of poor treatment that left the teenager suicidal.

Ella Copley, 17, from Tingley, West Yorkshire, has suffered from ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis), sometimes known as chronic fatigue syndrome, for seven years. She has been in Leeds General Infirmary since March, when she was taken there by ambulance with an infection later diagnosed as sepsis.

Her mother, Joanne McKee, 49, said the treatment Ella had received “feels like neglect and abuse”. She has posted videos on social media of the teenager screaming in pain when medicine is given by nasogastric tube. “I don’t think they believe that her pain is real at all,” she said.

McKee said doctors had told Ella she was “hypersensitive”, and suggested that she stroke a piece of material against her skin as part of a desensitisation programme. “I have just never, ever known anything so dismissive,” McKee said.

In an interview with Times Radio, she added: “No one has any understanding of her conditions. That really is the issue."

The charity Action for ME has written a letter to the hospital’s chief executive raising concerns over Ella’s case. In it, Sonya Chowdhury, chief executive of the charity, said she was “aware of several other situations that bear similarity with Ella’s illness and care”.

Questions have been raised over the treatment of Maeve Boothby-O’Neill, who died in October last year. Her death will be the subject of an inquest in Exeter next month.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: The Times, 18 July 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.