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The Care Quality Commission has imposed a major fine on a trust where a chemotherapy patient contracted a serious infection from bacteria in a ward’s en-suite bathroom and later died.

Gloucestershire Hospitals Foundation Trust was ordered to pay the sum at Cheltenham Magistrates’ Court yesterday after admitting failing to provide safe care and treatment to Chris Elliot at Cheltenham General Hospital.

It is one of only two CQC prosecutions brought over infections, with Dudley Group fined £2.53m in 2021 after two women died from sepsis.

The Gloucestershire case related to the care of Dr Elliot, who became infected by a strain of pseudomonas bacteria while receiving chemotherapy as an inpatient and died two weeks later.

Dr Elliot’s infection was genetically matched to a sample taken from the showerhead in the ensuite bathroom of his ward at CGH.

An earlier sample had already tested positive for the bacteria on 1 August, but no action was taken, and the ensuite bathroom remained in use.

The court heard that the trust had outsourced delegated water sampling and testing to NHS Gloucestershire Managed Services in 2021, according to the BBC. The prosecution said oversight of GMS was “insufficient”, saying that a water safety group did not meet regularly, and that “initial concerns over competence” were not pursued.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 16 June 2026

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