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  1. Past hour
  2. News Article
    The Ebola outbreak in eastern Congo has now surpassed 1,000 confirmed cases, with officials reporting 254 deaths as of Sunday evening. Congo’s Ministry of Health confirmed 1,003 cases and 100 recoveries since the epidemic was declared on 15 May in Ituri province. Caused by the rare Bundibugyo virus, for which no vaccines or treatments exist, this outbreak was the worst ever in its initial month. Officials admit more cases are likely unknown, and the peak is still ahead. Contact tracing remains a key issue, with local authorities achieving only 55 per cent coverage. The outbreak’s patient zero is yet to be identified, and over 35,000 contacts still require tracing, authorities confirmed. Read full article. Source: The Independent, 22 June 2026
  3. News Article
    The health minister has once again apologised for what he described as the "evil" perpetrated at Muckamore Abbey Hospital in County Antrim. Speaking in the assembly, Mike Nesbitt said what happened was a " true scandal". On Thursday, a long-awaited report into abuse at the hospital said a number of patients suffered physical abuse, including black eyes, broken bones, bruising and excessive restraint. Nesbitt said the weight of evidence had provided a "watershed" moment for the treatment and care of the most vulnerable in society. The Police Service of Northern Ireland has said its Muckamore investigation is the biggest criminal adult safeguarding case of its kind in the UK. In the assembly on Monday, Nesbitt said the report "helps us understand the failings of the past, and provides a road map for the work needed to address those issues". But, he said, it was "vital that we now move forward as a health and social care system, and importantly as a society, into a safer, more inclusive and accepting future for those most vulnerable in our society". Read full article. Source: BBC News, 22 July 2026
  4. Content Article
    The long-awaited report into maternity failures at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS trust, the largest investigation of its kind in the UK, involving about 2,500 families, will be published shortly. Led by the senior midwife Donna Ockenden, the inquiry investigated stillbirths, neonatal deaths, maternal deaths and babies or mothers who suffered brain damage and other injuries between 2012 and 2025. In this article some of the families affected share their stories about what happened to them in Nottingham, and explain why this is such a landmark moment.
  5. Today
  6. Community Post
    Thanks @Jules I've used AI to summarise this. Will watch the full presnetation too! “Can improvement and innovation save the NHS?” by Professor Mary Dixon-Woods Below is an AI generated concise summary report of the video “Can improvement and innovation save the NHS?”, a keynote by Professor Mary Dixon-Woods published by THIS Institute in May 2026. The lecture argues that improvement and innovation can help the NHS, but only when they are evidence-based, realistically implemented, attentive to inequality, and supported by well-functioning organisations rather than treated as universal solutions in themselves.[1][2] Executive summary The lecture presents a sober assessment of current NHS performance across access, timeliness, quality, effectiveness, and equity, using examples such as elective delays, cancer treatment delays, unwarranted variation in diabetes and breast cancer care, and persistent inequities in maternity outcomes. Professor Dixon-Woods argues that these problems are not simply deficits of effort or goodwill, but symptoms of deeper organisational, policy, and system design failures that limit the impact of improvement work.[2] Her central message is that innovation and improvement are necessary but insufficient unless they are grounded in evidence, matched to context, and protected from hype, overclaiming, and poorly designed large-scale programmes. She cautions that the NHS has often adopted interventions with excessive optimism, weak evaluation, and inadequate attention to implementation, creating cycles of enthusiasm followed by disappointment.[2] Main arguments The lecture identifies several core challenges facing the NHS: care is not consistently accessible, timely, high quality, effective, or equitable, and these deficits vary substantially by geography, deprivation, ethnicity, and sex. Examples cited include falling public satisfaction, persistent elective backlogs, non-compliance with guidance in some diagnostic testing, and marked disparities in maternal mortality and severe morbidity.[2] A major theme is that variation should not be dismissed as inevitable background noise, because it often indicates remediable organisational weakness, uneven capability, or failure to apply existing knowledge reliably. The lecture also highlights the continued use of some low-value activity alongside failures to deliver proven beneficial care, showing that both underuse and overuse coexist in the NHS.[2] Improvement lessons Professor Dixon-Woods argues that improvement succeeds least when it is treated as a slogan, a centrally imposed programme, or an assumption that any change is inherently beneficial. She emphasizes that large-scale initiatives often fail when they are oversold, under-specified, weakly evaluated, and inattentive to frontline realities, staffing pressures, and competing operational demands.[2] The lecture supports a more disciplined model of improvement: test interventions properly, understand mechanisms, use robust evidence, and distinguish genuinely effective innovation from attractive but weakly evidenced ideas. In practice, this means improvement should be designed as serious applied inquiry rather than as advocacy, branding, or policy theatre.[2] Governance implications For board and governance audiences, the lecture implies that oversight should focus not only on performance outcomes but on the organisational conditions that make safe and effective improvement possible. These conditions include the ability to identify risk early, hear uncomfortable information, respond to variation, evaluate change honestly, and sustain attention on inequity as well as aggregate performance.[2] The talk is particularly relevant to patient safety governance because it links poor outcomes to structural and cultural issues rather than isolated individual failings. It therefore supports governance approaches that emphasise system surveillance, speaking up, learning capability, and critical scrutiny of improvement claims before scale-up.[2] Actions for leaders A practical reading of the lecture suggests five priorities for NHS leaders and boards: · Treat major improvement claims as propositions requiring evidence, not as self-validating solutions.[2] · Target unwarranted variation as a governance signal of uneven quality and possible safety risk.[2] · Examine inequity explicitly, especially where deprivation, ethnicity, sex, or geography are linked to worse outcomes.[2] · Avoid adopting innovations at scale without credible implementation planning and evaluation.[2] · Strengthen organisational conditions for learning, challenge, and candour so that weak signals are detected earlier.[2] An example of the lecture’s practical relevance is its treatment of maternity inequity: disparities in mortality and morbidity are presented not as unfortunate externalities but as evidence that service design and care delivery are failing some groups more than others. That framing is directly applicable to board assurance, quality committees, and patient safety improvement programmes.[2] Would you like this converted into a more formal board paper style with headings such as background, key issues, implications, and recommendations? 1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E_iCWIazGtU 2. https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/15930243?hl=en-GB
  7. News Article
    NHS England is being warned that the planned rollout of a new “portal” for all NHS primary dental work could lead to widespread disruption. The NHS Dental Services Portal is proposed as a new digital system for managing all NHS dental contract administration, including how dental activity is recorded, validated and paid. It is being rolled out to modernise an old, fragmented process, with the aim of improving efficiency, transparency, and consistency. In an open letter sent to NHS Business Services Authority and NHSE, and shared with HSJ, the Dental Software Suppliers Association raised concerns about the speed of implementation being imposed. Read full article (paywalled). Source: Health Service Journal, 22 June 2026
  8. News Article
    NHS England has taken enforcement action against a major health trust over multiple safety concerns, warning that it cannot be sure more patients won’t be harmed. The sanction means Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, in Greater Manchester, could be fined or lose its license to provide care if it does not improve. It comes after a string of serious concerns were raised about patient safety, including in its gynaecological services, after an audit of hundreds of cases at Salford Royal Hospital in 2024 found dozens of women, including cancer patients, were “harmed” after their diagnosis and treatment were delayed due to admin failures. Now, a damning document, seen by The Independent, reveals NHS England found the trust has been “unable to provide assurance” that it has a clear and consistent structure “that will ensure no further patients may suffer harm”. Read full article. Source: The Independent, 19 June 2026
  9. News Article
    The report of the inquiry into the biggest maternity scandal in NHS history will outline “horrendous” failings in the care provided to women in Nottingham. A catalogue of appalling behaviour over many years by staff at the city’s two hospitals – Queen’s Medical Centre and Nottingham City hospital – included racism towards mothers, it will say. The NHS is bracing itself for the publication on Wednesday of a report by Donna Ockenden on 2,500 cases involving babies and mothers dying or being injured, and babies being stillborn, while under the care of Nottingham university hospitals NHS trust between 1 April 2012 and 31 May 2025. The document will stretch to more than 350 pages. Ockenden, a senior midwife and expert in maternity care failings, began her inquiry into Nottingham more than four years ago, in May 2022. About 2,505 families – more than in any previous maternity scandal – and approximately 850 staff and ex-staff of the NHS trust have given evidence to it. Read full article. Source: The Guardian, 22 June 2026
  10. News Article
    As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes deeply embedded in triage and clinical workflows, experts are raising concerns about a growing “blind trust” where clinicians and patients alike defer to algorithmic confidence over independent medical judgment. Speaking at the HLTH Europe 2026 conference, panellists stressed that a person’s information ecosystem —who they follow on social media, the podcasts they listen to, and how they interact with AI — is becoming a dominant determinant of health outcomes. Speaking at the event, Patient Safety Learning’s Chief Digital Officer Clive Flashman defined blind trust in this new era as the moment a “clinician stops being able to think independently, independently judging what they see, feel, or hear, because the algorithm has told them something that they should believe or do.” Read full article. Source: Medscape, 21 June 2026
  11. Content Article
    Patient Partnership Week (29 June-3rd July 2026) is a moment to focus on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare works best when patients are treated as partners.  Across the week, The Patients Association are bringing together patients, professionals, policymakers, and researchers to explore what meaningful partnership looks like in practice and why it matters, where progress is being made, and what still needs to change.  Patient Partnership Week 2026 webinars Understanding the causes of health inequalities and the role of trust in improving outcomes 29th June 2026, 3:45 - 4:45pm Book now Unlocking patient engagement with the People and Communities guidelines 30th June 2026, 9 - 10am Book now Do patients’ goals, values, and preferences really shape their care? 30th June 2026, 4 - 5pm Book now Power to the people? The 10 Year Health Plan, one year on 1st July 2026, 11am - 12pm Book now Why prioritising patient trust increases the value of using technology and data to improve research and care 2nd July 2026, 12:30 - 1:30pm Book now Equity in access: tackling barriers to treatment and care 3rd July 2026, 10 - 11am Book now Getting through: fixing how NHS communicates with patients 3rd July 2026, 2 - 3pmBook now
  12. Content Article
    In this blog, Jean Almond and Sam Freeman Carney from Parkinson’s UK explain how their new time critical medication dashboard is: exposing the cost of missed and delayed medication encouraging renewed focus on improvements reducing avoidable harm. This blog is part of a series on noncommunicable diseases, in support of World Patient Safety Day 2026. People with Parkinson’s rely on their medication, and need to take it on time. A delay of as little as 30 minutes can mean the difference between functioning well and being unable to move, walk, talk or swallow. Missing doses can lead to severe and irreversible harm to their health. People with Parkinson’s need to get their medication on time, every time. It is deeply concerning, then, that less than half (42%) of people with Parkinson’s admitted to hospital last year received their medication on time, every time. To help support the NHS in addressing this issue, Parkinson's UK worked with The Public Service Consultants (The PSC) to develop a ground-breaking new data dashboard, which shows the health economic benefits of improving time critical medication management for people with Parkinson's in hospitals. What does the time critical medication dashboard do? The time critical medication dashboard estimates the direct cost for hospitals and the impact on patient outcomes of time critical Parkinson’s medication delays and omissions. It does so at national, Integrated Care Board (ICB), NHS Trust and health board levels across England, Scotland, and Wales. The model considers impacts on key measures, including length of stay, staff time, mortality, re-admissions, and associated costs. The dashboard helps organisations evaluate different approaches to improve the timely administration of time critical medications — such as self-administration, staff training, or e-prescribing — by modelling the cost savings gained from implementing improvements. Real-world success and traction The dashboard has already: achieved over 3,500 views, primarily from healthcare professionals been shared through the NHS England’s three-year medicines safety improvement programme focused on time critical medication been promoted by the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) through their time critical medication quality improvement programme in Emergency Departments. Frontline teams are already utilising the tool to build local business cases for time critical medication quality improvement projects to improve patient safety. As one NHS Trust shared: "When we found the Dashboard, it helped us to show in real terms, financial terms, the impact missed and delayed doses of [Parkinson’s] medications were going to have on our Trust. We were able to use this to gain traction and benchmark our starting position. We hope to see a significant improvement in the dashboard as we work on our [Quality Improvement Programme]." The dashboard has supercharged our work at Parkinson's UK, opening doors with previously unengaged hospitals and shifting conversations from abstract risks to concrete, localised numbers. Award winning Our dashboard won the award for the ‘Most effective contribution to improving care for those with long term conditions’ at the HSJ Partnership Awards in March 2026. This is further recognition that our tool is helping address an avoidable, recurring patient safety issue and supporting the NHS in making the urgent improvements needed across the system. How to find out more and take action Alongside the dashboard, we provide a comprehensive suite of free resources to help health systems improve how they manage time critical Parkinson’s medication: Our 'Time critical medication: 10 recommendations for your hospital', developed by NHS health professionals living with Parkinson's, enable NHS organisations to support timely, safe and appropriate medicine management for people with Parkinson's. Our suite of resources and learning supports hospital teams to deliver time critical medication to people with Parkinson's. No one with Parkinson’s should fear going into hospital because they can’t get the medication they rely on. Our dashboard is a critical new resource to show how hospitals can and need to go further. We urge health professionals, NHS Trusts, Health Boards and Integrated Care Boards to use this tool and transform their management of time critical Parkinson’s medication. Share your insights What is your experience of time critical medication? As a patient or a clinician? You can comment below (sign up first for free) or get in touch with the Patient Safety Learning hub team at [email protected].
  13. Last week
  14. Community Post
    A highly recommended watch for anyone interested in leadership, patient safety, quality improvement and implementation. That is, if you haven'y yet come across it. Mary Dixon-Woods' lecture Can improvement and innovation save the NHS? is both thought-provoking and refreshing. It provides an opportunity to pause and reflect on where we are in our improvement journey. Among the many nuggets is a reflection on the "priority thickets" described in recent NHS literature, and the reality that health systems are often trying to improve everything, everywhere, all at once. One observation particularly resonated with me. Reflecting on decades of inquiries and reports into healthcare failings, she notes that sometimes the only thing that changes between one report and the next is the font. A sobering thought. The good news is that this lecture is not simply a critique. It also points towards practical ways forward, supported by evidence, resources and examples. An hour very well spent. Watch the video here: https://www.thisinstitute.cam.ac.uk/blog/can-improvement-and-innovation-save-the-nhs/
  15. Community Post
    thank you Urmila, so please that I'm not an outlier when one looks at the evidence - there is no clear guidance - but we should be doing all we can - as you allude to
  16. Event
    This webinar will examine the occupational risks of formaldehyde exposure in healthcare and the practical steps organisations can take to protect their workforce. Hosted by the European Biosafety Network, this session brings together regulatory expertise and international occupational health insight to examine the hazards facing healthcare workers who handle formalin, the legal obligations now placed on employers, and the changes needed to make safer practice a reality. Josh Cobb, Secretary of the EBN, will explore why exposure in laboratories and operating theatres can reach concentrations far exceeding safe levels, why the updated CMRD (2022) and COSHH Regulations require employers to eliminate exposure at source, and why closed-system specimen containers represent the proven solution that meets this legal standard. Dr Acran Selman Navarro, Chair of the ICOH Scientific Committee on Occupational Health for Health Workers, will examine the health effects of formaldehyde exposure, what rigorous exposure controls look like in practice, and how organisations can strengthen training and establish continuous monitoring programmes. This session is intended for laboratory managers, theatre leads, occupational health teams, safety leads, and policymakers with an interest in protecting healthcare workers from formaldehyde exposure. Register here.
  17. Event
    As health care systems grow increasingly complex, pharmacists are key members of the patient care team. This webinar, held by the World Patients Alliance in collaboration with the International Pharmaceutical Federation, will explore how pharmacists contribute to safer care through medication management, patient empowerment, and interprofessional collaboration. It will also highlight the patient perspective by showing how patients and families contribute to safer medication use through shared decision-making, early reporting of concerns, health literacy, and partnerships with pharmacists and other health professionals. Agenda Co-Chairs: Marianne Ivey, Professor, Division of Pharmacy Practice and Administrative Sciences, College of Pharmacy, the University of Cincinnati, USA Helen Haskell, Chair of WPA Patient Safety & Quality Council, World Patients Alliance (WPA), USA Advancing patient safety: The expanding role of pharmacists across health systems John Hertig, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Purdue University; Founder and President, Hertig Healthcare Advising LLC, USA From intervention to impact: reducing medication errors through patient-centred care Mohamed Elsabakhawi, Pharmacist/Owner, Shoppers Drug Mart, Mississauga, Canada Improving teamwork and communication for medication safety and patient-centred care Regina Mariam Namata Kamoga, Executive Director, for Community Health and Information Network (CHAIN), Uganda Panellists: John Hertig, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Purdue University; Founder and President, Hertig Healthcare Advising LLC, USA Regina Mariam Namata Kamoga, Executive Director, Community Health and Information Network (CHAIN), Uganda Mohamed Elsabakhawi, Pharmacist/Owner, Shoppers Drug Mart, Canada Register here.
  18. Content Article
    Healthcare organisations have experienced a steady rise in data breaches, many of which expose large amounts of patient information. This analysis reviewed more than 7,300 reported incidents to identify the factors linked with the most extensive breaches. Cyberattacks involving hacking were most frequently associated with large‑scale events, particularly when attackers accessed network servers. Breaches that involved business associates, such as external vendors, also tended to affect more individuals. Hacking became increasingly common over time and now represents the majority of breaches. These results highlight critical weaknesses in healthcare systems and emphasize the need for stronger security practices and tighter oversight of third‑party partners.
  19. Content Article
    Fatigue is widely accepted as a feature of working life across healthcare. Long hours, shift work and high workload mean that many staff regularly experience some degree of fatigue. Fatigue is associated with increased risk of error and reduced performance and therefore has negative impacts on both patient safety and staff wellbeing. Fatigue is also linked to broader workforce challenges including staff physical and mental health, burnout, absenteeism and retention. Although these risks are well documented, the extent to which they are addressed through structured and systematic approaches within healthcare remains less clear. The Clinical Human Factors Group recently reviewed the literature to explore how fatigue is currently managed across healthcare and what strategies are being used in practice. The findings provide an overview of how fatigue is understood and addressed and highlight a gap between the well-established risks associated with fatigue and the ways in which those risks are mitigated in practice.
  20. News Article
    A number of long-term patients at a hospital for vulnerable adults suffered physical abuse, including black eyes, broken bones, bruising and excessive restraint. The long-awaited final report into the abuse at Muckamore Abbey Hospital has been published. Chaired by Tom Kark KC, the public inquiry ran for three years from June 2022, hearing oral evidence from 181 witnesses and more than 300 statements. The report into what happened inside the hospital found "deviance" was so normalised that working below par became acceptable. It also makes it clear that abuse did not involve every patient nor every member of staff, nor a majority of the staff. But many patients had their lives made "miserable" by systematic bullying by certain members of staff whose job it was to look after them. Read full article. Source: BBC News, 18 June 2026
  21. News Article
    Thousands of people across the UK could face complex surgery to remove a spinal implant now linked to significant bone loss. This alarming development follows the device's global withdrawal from sale and an urgent recall for patients to undergo X-rays. The M6-C artificial disc implant was designed to replace damaged neck discs, offering an alternative to spinal fusion surgery, involving metal rods. However, the implant has been associated with osteolysis – a progressive condition where bone tissue is destroyed and reabsorbed by the body. Read full article. Source: The Independent, 19 June 2026
  22. News Article
    Health innovation and safety minister Preet Kaur Gill has said she is “very sorry” after being questioned by MPs about NHS England’s handling of information provided to the National Data Guardian (NDG) on access to patient data within the Federated Data Platform (FDP). Appearing before the Health and Social Care Committee on 16 June 2026, Gill was challenged over concerns that NHS England had incorrectly described who could access identifiable patient information within the FDP. The concerns relate to NHS England documentation submitted to the NDG, which incorrectly described who could access identifiable patient data within parts of the FDP. Martin Wrigley, MP for Newton Abbot, raised concerns about reports that identifiable patient data was flowing into the national FDP system and that Palantir engineers and others could obtain administrative access when required. Similar concerns were raised earlier this month by the NDG. Read full article. Source: Digital Health, 18 June 2026
  23. News Article
    Concerns have been raised about patient safety at a hospital emergency department less than two years after it came out of special scrutiny for similar issues. The unit at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd in Denbighshire has been designated as needing significant improvements over issues including leadership, governance, culture and overcrowding following an inspection last month. Carol Shillabeer, chief executive of the hospital's Betsi Cadwaladr health board, said it fully accepted the findings, which reflected "serious concerns". One woman who said she witnessed an elderly patient die alone in the overcrowded unit with beds lining its corridors said the findings came as "no surprise" to her. The hospital unit has been designated as a service requiring significant improvement (SRSI) following an unannounced inspection by regulatory body Healthcare Inspectorate Wales (HIW) in May. Alun Jones, HIW chief executive, said it was "very disappointing" that some of the previous problems had reoccurred since it left special scrutiny in 2024. He said a full report will be published in September, but that issues included the concerns of staff who felt they "weren't listened to" when speaking up about safety issues. Read full article. Source: BBC News, 17 June 2026
  24. Content Article
    Following revelations in 2017 of the abuse of patients by staff at Muckamore Abbey Hospital, the Minister for Health in Northern Ireland ordered a public inquiry be held into that abuse and related matters. The Inquiry, chaired by Tom Kark KC, and heard from 235 witnesses, including a number of service users, and over 90 relatives of service users. It found that patients had been abused and systematically bullied by staff members at Muckamore Abbey Hospital whose job it was to look after them. The report includes 106 recommendations. The Inquiry heard extensive evidence concerning injuries sustained by patients, particularly bruises, unexplained marks and signs consistent with physical abuse. Some patients were verbal and were able to express that they had been assaulted by staff, but such direct evidence was very limited. Relatives reported being informed by staff that injuries were caused by self-harm, behavioural incidents or peer-on-peer violence. They were told their relative was clumsy or may have fallen in the night. Over time, many families lost confidence in these explanations, especially where injuries were located on areas of the body difficult to self-inflict or appeared repeatedly in similar patterns. Sometimes injuries were unexplained even when a patient was supposed to be under supervision. The Inquiry also heard evidence of physical abuse captured on CCTV, including forceful handling, dragging, pushing and inappropriate restraint. These incidents provided confirmation that unexplained injuries reported by families over many years could not be attributed solely to patient behaviour or peer-on-peer violence. The presence of injuries alongside incidents captured on CCTV demonstrated that earlier concerns had been justified and should have prompted urgent intervention. The Inquiry notes that families’ concerns were exacerbated by the lack of communication from staff at the hospital about when patients had been injured, and many complained of significant delays in injuries being reported to them. The Panel concluded that injuries such as bruises and marks were not isolated or incidental; they were visible indicators of systemic failure. Dealing with each incident individually resulted in the inability of the organisation to recognise patterns, escalate concerns and protect patients, and allowed physical abuse and neglect to continue unchecked, causing lasting harm to patients and profound distress to their families. Key themes Key patient safety issues highlighted in this report include: Information sharing and co-production Families described not being informed of their rights when relatives were detained under the Mental Health (NI) Order 1986. Many believed decisions were made without consultation, leaving them feeling excluded from their loved one’s care. The Inquiry repeatedly heard that families were informed of decisions rather than involved in making them. Families reported not being able to visit during early stages of admission, removing opportunities to share crucial information. Many families struggled to identify a consistent point of contact or key worker. Restrictive practices The Panel identified serious and persistent concerns regarding the frequency, rationale, recording and governance of restrictive practices over a prolonged period. Seclusion was a particular area of concern. Although policies on seclusion became increasingly prescriptive over time, including requirements for monitoring, the Inquiry heard evidence that implementation was inconsistent, sometimes inadequate and not effectively audited. The use of PRN medication as a form of restrictive practice was also problematic. Although guidance emphasised that PRN medication should only be used with a clear therapeutic rationale and as a last resort, families frequently described experiencing their relatives as sedated, disengaged or ‘zombified’. The Panel accepted that this was not necessarily an indication of overmedication by use of regularly prescribed drugs but may have reflected the use of PRN medication to control behaviour when other non-medical approaches had either not been available or not been attempted. Governance and oversight of restrictive practices were inadequate. Although data on restraint, seclusion and incidents was collected and reported internally, the Inquiry found limited evidence of effective senior management challenge, trend analysis or sustained action to reduce use. Complaints and concerns Evidence revealed widespread confusion, fear and mistrust among families, alongside systemic weaknesses in complaint handling, oversight and organisational learning. Many family members found the complaints system opaque and difficult to navigate, with little clarity about how complaints were investigated, how decisions were reached or what outcomes, if any, resulted. Many families reported finding out about injuries, assaults or significant incidents only during visits, or after long delays. Others described communications they perceived as defensive, dismissive or designed to protect the institution rather than investigate the facts. Some believed that staff were effectively ‘investigating themselves’, creating perceptions of bias and eroding confidence in outcomes. Even when complaints were upheld in part, families often felt responses lacked empathy, apology or accountability. Fear was a major barrier to complaint-raising. Witnesses described explicit or implicit warnings suggesting that complaining could affect their relative’s care or future admissions. Patients themselves were sometimes frightened to speak up. Governance and oversight arrangements were also found wanting. Although complaints data was presented in dashboards and discussed at Muckamore Abbey Hospital management meetings, there was limited evidence of robust analysis, challenge or sustained organisational learning. Previous concerns, previous investigations and warning signs The Panel concluded that Muckamore Abbey Hospital exhibited multiple, persistent and well-documented warning signs long before 2017: sustained understaffing; inadequate specialist supports; unsafe environments; escalating violence and restraint; frequent safeguarding referrals; family complaints; and a geographically and culturally closed institution. While individual allegations were often investigated, the system failed to connect the dots. No single mechanism brought together incident reporting, safeguarding intelligence, complaints and workforce pressures in a way that would have revealed the scale of risk Safeguarding The Panel found that safeguarding systems were fragmented and insufficiently integrated with the Trust’s wider clinical governance and risk management arrangements. Safeguarding investigations were structurally separated to preserve independence, but this separation limited organisational learning. Staff and ward management The Panel concluded that staffing challenges at Muckamore Abbey Hospital were long-standing, well-documented and increasingly severe, yet were never adequately resolved. These systemic workforce failures significantly increased patient vulnerability and contributed to the conditions in which abuse was able to occur and persist. Staffing shortages were persistent from at least 2009 onwards and worsened significantly after 2012, when recruitment freezes and temporary contracts became common due to the anticipated closure of Muckamore Abbey Hospital. The ratio of registered nurses to healthcare assistants was frequently below safe levels, and in some wards fewer than half of staff were registered nurses. Healthcare assistants, who provide the majority of direct patient care, had no specialist training requirements and relied heavily on informal learning. Supervision of healthcare assistants inconsistent, and clinical supervision arrangements fell far below what would be expected in a high-risk inpatient setting. This created a task-focused culture where staff prioritised basic physical care over personal and therapeutic engagement. Throughout this period, senior leadership and the Trust Board repeatedly reassured themselves and external bodies that staffing was safe, even as the regulator and whistleblowers raised escalating concerns. Leadership While extensive governance structures existed, they consistently failed to work to bring relevant information to the Board of Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, and to translate information into understanding of risks or into an active response. There was a resulting lack of insight by the Board into the difficulties faced at Muckamore Abbey Hospital. A central failure identified by the Inquiry was the Trust’s focus on governance processes rather than outcomes. Reports to the Board emphasised the existence of policies, action plans and committees but rarely demonstrated whether these arrangements were effective in protecting patients or improving care. Incident reporting, safeguarding referrals, complaints and staff intelligence were routinely aggregated at Trust level, masking significant variation at hospital level and thus obscuring sustained patterns of harm at Muckamore Abbey Hospital. Risks from Muckamore Abbey Hospital were often downgraded or removed as they ascended the risk register hierarchy, even when underlying conditions persisted or deteriorated. Risks affecting specific services were smoothed out through aggregation and failed to reach the Board as Principal Risks. Even after external regulators raised serious concerns, including the issuing by the Regulation and Quality Improvement Authority (RQIA) of Improvement Notices in 2019, the Board continued to accept assurances that care was safe, often disputing regulators’ findings without providing robust supporting data. Senior leaders failed to reconcile contradictory evidence from inspections, incidents, safeguarding reviews and staffing data. Crucially, the Board did not adequately address structural risk factors such as chronic staffing shortages, excessive use of untrained agency staff and inappropriate ward mixes. Reassurances provided by executive directors were not properly scrutinised for any underlying supporting data. External agencies inspection and oversight The Inquiry concluded that, although multiple agencies were involved with Muckamore Abbey Hospital over many years, none succeeded in identifying, preventing or stopping abuse before it was revealed, exposing significant limitations in the external oversight framework. Between 2009 and 2019, RQIA conducted over 100 inspections of Muckamore Abbey Hospital, initially at ward level and later using a whole-hospital approach. These inspections frequently identified problems such as staffing shortages, safeguarding weaknesses, excessive restrictive practices and governance failings. However, the inspection methodology relied heavily on documentation review and there was limited involvement with staff, patients and families, providing only a snapshot of practice. Inspectors acknowledged that staff behaviour changed when inspectors arrived on the wards and that therefore they were unlikely to observe ‘normal’ ward culture. Despite having statutory powers to do so, RQIA did not review CCTV footage at Muckamore Abbey Hospital, even after CCTV was viewed by the Trust and by Police Service of Northern Ireland and serious concerns were raised. Evidence to the Inquiry suggested that families repeatedly raised concerns through various routes but felt unheard, contributing to a loss of confidence in advocacy and oversight mechanisms. Overall, the Panel concluded that external inspection and oversight failed to operate as an effective safety net. Warning signs, including staffing instability, increased violence, high use of restrictive practices and repeated complaints, were visible and known but not interpreted as indicators of potential abuse. Oversight was reactive rather than preventive. The central lesson is that external regulation and investigation must extend beyond procedural compliance and episodic inspection. For services caring for highly vulnerable people, effective oversight requires proactive, risk-based approaches that: examine culture; triangulate multiple data sources, including where appropriate the use of CCTV; engage directly with families and, where possible, patients; and act decisively when conditions associated with abuse are present. Planning and funding of learning disability services Overall, the Inquiry found there was a failure to align policy, funding, workforce planning and accountability that prevented meaningful transformation of learning disability services. The absence of a coherent, long-term, system-wide approach contributed directly to sustained institutionalisation of individuals at Muckamore Abbey Hospital and to risks in care quality and safety. Redress There is no doubt that patients did suffer as a result of abuse within Muckamore Abbey Hospital but to try to assess the extent of such abuse in relation to individual patients or the nature of the harm caused was deemed as beyond the Inquiry’s capacity. In relation to direct redress, including the consideration of financial compensation, however, our recommendation would be that the Department of Health should set up a small working party to consult with patients, service user groups and individuals connected to those who have suffered abuse at Muckamore Abbey Hospital in relation to what form redress might properly take.
  25. News Article
    A comprehensive programme of webinars has been unveiled for Clinical Audit Awareness Week 2026 (#CAAW26), including NHS England Chief Executive Sir James Mackey newly confirmed as a keynote speaker. Taking place from 22 to 26 June 2026, the annual campaign run by Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP) promotes the role of clinical audit and evidence-based improvement in improving patient care and outcomes. The centrepiece of the campaign is a series of free, online webinars spanning five themed days, each examining a different dimension of clinical audit and healthcare improvement. Opening on Monday 22 June, the first session will explore how clinical audit supports major NHS strategic priorities, including the three shifts outlined in the NHS 10‑Year Plan towards prevention, community‑based care and greater use of data and digital tools. Tuesday’s programme shifts the focus to patient and public involvement, with discussions on how engagement at local and national levels can address inequalities and improve outcomes, including a dedicated session on maternity care disparities. Midweek, the spotlight turns to innovation and transformation, highlighting how emerging tools and technologies are reshaping audit and improvement practices across healthcare systems. On Thursday, a webinar delivered in partnership with Patient Safety Learning will examine patient safety, demonstrating how robust audit data can identify risks, reduce harm and support safer care pathways. The week concludes on Friday with a focus on data‑informed improvement and impact, exploring how evidence from audits and registries can be translated into tangible, real‑world changes in care delivery. Across the week, sessions will also be complemented by daily announcements of the Excellence in Clinical Audit Awards, recognising achievements and best practice from across the sector. Winners will be presenting their projects to inspire others and share this excellent work. All webinars are free to attend, though advance registration is required. The programme is aimed at a wide audience, including clinicians, audit professionals, quality improvement specialists and healthcare leaders interested in leveraging data to improve care. By bringing together expertise from across the NHS and beyond, HQIP hopes the week will not only celebrate achievements but also build momentum for future improvement efforts. Discover the full programme, including the speakers and topics for each webinar: Clinical Audit Awareness Week, 22-26 June 2026
  26. News Article
    Cancer centres in nearly every region of England reported significant rises in recruitment freezes to oncology posts over the past year, according to new figures shared with HSJ. The Royal College of Radiologists’ president Stephen Harden warned that the growing constraints highlighted by the college’s research came at a time when cancer performance had stagnated – and that the NHS “desperately needed [more staff] to turn this round”. An exclusive regional breakdown calculated by the RCR based on its annual oncology workforce census, and shared with HSJ, found every region apart from two reported rises in the number of centres implementing recruitment freezes for oncology posts in 2025. The RCR’s Dr Harden said: “We completely get that we’re in a financially constrained environment but now is really not the time to be limiting recruitment to cancer posts, particularly around diagnosis and treatment. “Extra staff are desperately needed to turn this thing around. Waiting a month for your scan results – and longer – is not really what we should be about”. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 18 June 2026
  27. Event
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    When organisations begin exploring healthcare interoperability, the conversation often starts with: “Which API should we use?” In reality, that is usually one of the last questions to ask. Successful interoperability starts with understanding: What data is required Who needs access to it When it is needed across the patient journey Whether the requirement is national, regional or local How information should be shared between systems and organisations. Only once these questions are answered can you determine the most appropriate integration pathway. For those already working in interoperability, standards and digital transformation, this webinar will move beyond the basics. It will explore the practical challenges organisations face when translating information sharing requirements into usable solutions. It will discuss: • National versus local integration approaches • Interoperability and integration readiness • NHS onboarding, governance and assurance considerations • Selecting the right integration route for your use case. Register
  28. Content Article
    We talk about resilience, efficiency, and ‘just getting through the day’. But behind closed doors, many GPs are working at a pace and intensity that is simply not safe. Many who have felt pushed to the brink: overwhelmed, burnt out, and questioning whether they can continue. That isn’t just a few isolated GPs; the data suggests this feeling is widespread across the profession. In Nottinghamshire, the local medical committee developed a safe working charter to support this shift in thinking. It’s not a prescriptive checklist, but it offers practical ways practices can start to embed safer ways of working. It focuses on two key areas: workload control and practice systems.
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