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Showing results for tags 'Patient death'.
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News Article
Patient died after 'transplant surgeon error'
Patient Safety Learning posted a news article in News
A transplant patient died after a surgeon failed to disclose he had spilt stomach contents on organs which went on to be used in NHS operations. The 36-year-old died of an aneurysm caused directly by infection from a donated liver, while two other patients became ill from transplants. The incident took place in 2015 but only came to light when one of the sick patients attended a hospital in Wales. It had involved a surgeon from Oxford University NHS Foundation Trust. Several organs became infected with Candida albicans, a fungal infection, after the surgeon cut the stomach in a donor while retrieving organs, spilling the contents over other organs. The surgeon did not tell anyone as he should have done and the organs were transplanted into three patients. The patient, who did not want to be named, said: "What angers me to this day is that fact that the surgeon who removed the organs from the donor wasn't honest. It was only when people who received the organs became unwell that the truth was told." Read full story Source: BBC News, 21 November 2019- Posted
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News Article
Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital: Babies and mums died 'amid toxic culture'
Patient Safety Learning posted a news article in News
Babies and mothers died amid a "toxic" culture at a hospital trust stretching back 40 years, a report has said. The catalogue of maternity care failings at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust are contained in a report leaked to The Independent. It reveals that some children were left disabled, staff got the names of some dead babies wrong and, in one case, referred to a child as "it". The trust apologised and said "a lot" had been done to address concerns. In 2017, then Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt announced an investigation into avoidable baby deaths at the trust, which runs Royal Shrewsbury Hospital and Telford's Princess Royal. It is being led by maternity expert Donna Ockenden, who authored the report for NHS Improvement. Its initial scope was to examine 23 cases but this has now grown to more than 270 , covering the period from 1979 to the present day. The cases include 22 stillbirths, three deaths during pregnancy, 17 deaths of babies after birth, three deaths of mothers, 47 cases of substandard care and 51 cases of cerebral palsy or brain damage. The interim report said the number of cases it is now being asked to review "seems to represent a longstanding culture at this trust that is toxic to improvement effort". Read full story Source: BBC News, 20 November 2019- Posted
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- Obstetrics and gynaecology/ Maternity
- Patient death
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Content ArticleOn 11 June 2019 an investigation into the death of Brooke Martin aged 19 started. Brooke was a patient at Isla House, Chadwick Lodge, Milton Keynes and was detained under the Mental Health Act. She had been diagnosed with Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder and Autism Spectrum Disorder. Brooke was found hanging in her room and was taken to Milton Keynes University Hospital where she died on 11 June 2019.
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- Coroner reports
- Coroner
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Content ArticleDr Robert D. Glatter, medical advisor for Medscape Emergency Medicine, Dr Megan Ranney, professor of emergency medicine and the academic dean at Brown University School of Public Health and Dr Jane Barnsteiner, emeritus professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, discuss the tragic case involving RaDonda Vaught, who was an ICU nurse who was recently convicted in Tennessee of criminally negligent homicide and gross neglect following a medical error due to administration of the wrong medication that led to a patient's death.
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- Human error
- Legal issue
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Content ArticleNew data from the Office for National Statistics demonstrates that people with severe and potentially terminal health conditions are more than twice as likely to take their own lives than the general population. This press release by the Campaign for Dignity in Dying highlights the patient safety issues caused by current laws around assisted dying in the UK, including patients dying alone by suicide, without loved ones to support them.
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- Self harm/ suicide
- Patient death
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Content ArticleThe newly released Ockenden report into maternity services at Shrewsbury and Telford NHS trust is at least the fourth similar report in recent years, with two more in progress. Many messages are not new, and these are not isolated findings. Women and families accessing care throughout the UK continue to feel ignored. Many families remain concerned that they are not receiving full and frank investigations and explanations after the death or injury of a mother or baby. Repeated headlines understandably undermine women’s confidence in services when they should be able to trust that they will receive safe, high quality care writes Marian Knight and Susanna Stanford in this BMJ Editorial.
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- Maternity
- Investigation
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Content ArticleMartin Bromiley is a commercial airline training Captain and founder of The Clinical Human Factors Group. This episode of the Leadership Enigma podcast is deeply personal, inspirational and thought provoking. Martin describes how he turned the loss of his wife after a surgical procedure into a mission to understand and help others embrace the need for non-technical behaviours especially during critical times. He chats about the aviation and healthcare industry in relation to themes such as deference to hierarchy, the checklist manifesto, confident humility and creating an environment where your team and organisation embrace the challenge to 'double their error rate.' Behaviours are the bedrock for living your values and creating a culture that is positive and sustainable.
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- Human factors
- Surgery - General
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Content ArticleThis analysis by Paul Gallagher, Health Correspondent at i News discusses the prevalence of maternity scandals in the NHS, in light of the publication of the Ockenden Review into failings in maternity services at Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust. He highlights the importance of implementing the findings of the review, particularly focusing on the need for a comprehensive plan to tackle workforce shortages. He also highlights the continued existence in some trusts of a culture of covering up harm, evidenced by staff at Shrewsbury being pressured not to talk to investigators, right up until the report's publication.
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- Maternity
- Patient death
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Content ArticleThis report presents the findings and conclusions of an independent review into clinical governance arrangements within maternity services at The North West London Hospitals NHS Trust. The independent review was set up following three maternal deaths in one year and two other serious untoward incidents (SUIs) in the Trusts's maternity unit.
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- Maternity
- Patient death
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Content ArticleThis investigation by the Healthcare Commission examined the cases of ten women who died during pregnancy or within 42 days of delivery at Northwick Park Hospital, North West London Hospitals NHS Trust, between April 2002 and April 2005. This number of maternal deaths was significantly higher statistically when compared with other trusts that serve similar populations.
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- Maternity
- Patient death
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Content ArticleIn this video, Dr Zubin Damania discusses the recent criminal conviction of US nurse RaDonda Vaught for a medical error and why this is terrible for patient safety, moral and the future of nursing and medicine.
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- Nurse
- Criminal behaviour
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Content ArticleIn March 2015, Bill Kirkup published his report on avoidable harm in maternity services at the Morecambe Bay NHS Trust. His introduction carried a warning: “It is vital that the lessons, now plain to see, are learnt... by other Trusts, which must not believe that ‘it could not happen here.’” With the publication of the Ockenden report, we now know that one of those other Trusts was the Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Hospital Trust. “For more than two decades,” Donna Ockenden wrote, “they [famiies] have tried to raise concerns but were brushed aside, ignored and not listened to.” But why should patients and families have had to show that kind of courage in the first place? Instead of seeing patient feedback as a foundation stone of high quality, evidence based care, healthcare providers too often see it as a threat writes Miles Sibley in this BMJ Editorial.
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- Investigation
- Maternity
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Content ArticleThis is the transcript of a statement given in the House of Commons by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Sajid Javid MP, in response to the publication of the final report of the Ockenden Review. In the statement he makes a commitment that the local trust, NHS England and the Department of Health and Social Care will accept all 84 recommendations made by the Review. This is followed by questions from MPs in the Chamber and Mr Javid's responses.
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- Maternity
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Content ArticleNHS Resolution has published a set of three reports which explore clinical issues that contribute to compensation claims within Emergency Departments.
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- Negligence claim
- Legal issue
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Content ArticleThe Patient Safety Movement are looking for patients, family members, health workers and administrators to reach out if they have an experience related to harm or death due to a medication error in the operating room. While the specific numbers may be debated, that medication errors, while rare in the operating, could have catastrophic consequences. The Patient Safety Movement are interested in hearing your perspective concerning this issue. Please email events@patientsafetymovement.org if you have a story that you’d like to share. If you are worried about anonymity please submit your story at the link below.
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- Staff safety
- Patient
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Content ArticleThe Independent review of maternity services at the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust was commissioned in 2017 to assess the quality of investigations relating to newborn, infant and maternal harm at the Trust. When it commenced this review was of 23 families’ cases, but it has subsequently grown to cover cases of maternity care relating to 1,486 families, the majority of which were patients at the Trust between the years 2000 and 2019. Some families had multiple clinical incidents therefore a total of 1,592 clinical incidents involving mothers and babies have been reviewed with the earliest case from 1973 and the latest from 2020.
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- Maternity
- Investigation
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Content ArticleAt the moment, we’ve got maternity scandals day in, day out, which are pure evidence of the fact that our maternity units are just not up to scratch. They’re unsafe for mothers, unsafe for babies, and that is not acceptable. Suzanne White, a former radiographer and a clinical negligence lawyer for the past 25 years, looks at the maternity safety scandals across the NHS and considers if any lessons have been learnt.
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- Maternity
- Investigation
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Content ArticleThis webpage contains information from the Royal College of Anaesthetists (RCOA) on coroners' reports that have been sent to the RCOA so that action can be taken to prevent future deaths. The webpage contains: information about the latest reports received. links to articles relating to the patient safety issues identified. information on multidisciplinary team training. training videos.
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- Anaesthesia
- Anaesthetist
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Content ArticleThis study in the British Journal of General Practice aimed to identify cardiovascular disease-related Prevention of Future Deaths reports (PFDs) involving anticoagulants, and to highlight issues raised and responses received. The authors highlight that nearly two-thirds (60%) of PFDs had not received responses from the organisations they were sent to, including NHS trusts, hospitals and general practices. They call for national organisations, healthcare professionals and prescribers to take actions that address concerns raised by coroners in PFDs, in order to improve the safe use of anticoagulants in treating cardiovascular disease.
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- Patient death
- Coroner reports
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Content ArticleThis study in BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine examined coroners’ Prevention of Future Deaths (PFDs) reports to identify deaths involving Covid-19 that coroners saw as preventable. The authors found that: there was geographical variation in the reporting of PFDs; most (39%) were written by coroners in the North West of England. the coroners raised 56 concerns, problems in communication being the most common (30%), followed by failure to follow protocols (23%). NHS organisations were sent the most PFDs (51%), followed by the government (26%). responses to PFDs by these organisations were poor. The study concludes that PFDs contain a rich source of information on preventable deaths that has previously been difficult to examine systematically. It identified concerns raised by coroners that need to be addressed during the government’s inquiry into the handling of the Covid-19 pandemic, to reduce the likelihood of mistakes being repeated.
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Content Article
Preventable deaths tracker
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Coroner reports
The Preventable Deaths Tracker was set up to explore concerns raised by coroners to prevent future deaths. The tracker aims to collate data, information and analysis arising from coroners reports and other investigations and make it accessible for all. It hopes to warn against repeat hazards and highlight important lessons, to improve public safety, reduce avoidable harms and prevent premature deaths. The tracker was originally developed with funding from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) School for Primary Care Research.- Posted
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Content ArticleAll big experiences in our lives have two realities. There is what really happened. And there is the narrative, the story we tell ourselves and each other about what happened. Of the two, psychologists say it’s the narrative that matters most. Creating coherent stories about events allows us to make sense of them. It is the narrative that determines our reactions, and what we do next. Two years after the World Health Organization (WHO) finally used the word “pandemic” in its own story about the deadly new virus from Wuhan, narratives have multiplied and changed around the big questions. How bad is it? What should we do about it? When will it be over? The stories we embraced have sometimes been correct, but others have sown division, even caused needless deaths. Those stories aren’t finished – and neither is the pandemic. As we navigate what could be – if we are lucky – Covid’s transition to a present but manageable disease, it is these narratives we most need to understand and reconcile. What has really happened since 2020? And how does it still affect us now?
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Content ArticleIn this personal blog, an NHS volunteer describes her experience of supporting a patient dying in hospital of Covid-19. She highlights the role that volunteers can play in giving compassion and comfort to patients in an overwhelmed health system. She also draws attention to the lack of training she had before taking on the role, and the mental and emotional toll of volunteering in such environments.
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- Pandemic
- Hospital ward
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Content ArticleSky Rollings had been diagnosed with Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder (EUPD) and was sectioned under the Mental Health Act. She was transferred from a Children and Adolescent Mental Health Hospital to the Acute Adult Unit at the Harplands Hospital on 4 November 2019. She died on 9 November at the Royal Stoke University Hospital.
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- Patient death
- Children and Young People
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