🚨 EXCLUSIVE: Rishi Sunak is funneling thousands of NHS patients into private hospitals but are they safe? The Sunday Times has learned of hundreds of cases of unnecessary surgery. 🧵 1/9 thetimes.co.uk/article/8d7007…
Breast surgeon Ian Paterson harmed hundreds of his patients. But was he really a rogue? Compensation for negligence (excluding his victims) shows unnecessary surgery is the single largest category. This is only a glimpse into the opaque world of private healthcare 2/9
“This isn't a question of rogue surgeons. This is the routine business as usual approach with people being referred for private operations and being overtreated" says @GuyWForster 3/9
Many of the Paterson inquiry recommendations have yet to be acted on. Chairman Graham James told me: "Even allowing for the pandemic, it is disappointing more have not been fully implemented. Until they are, the possibility of a similar tragedy will not be averted.” 4/9
Financial motives can influence care in private healthcare. @CHPIthinktank found more than 600 consultants had shares or a stake in hospitals they sent patients to, while 77 doctors received a fee each time equipment they owned was used for treating or diagnosing patients. 5/9
Are patients protected by insurance. Not always. In a staggering gap some insurers have complete discretion to walk away without paying a penny in compensation. It had tragic consequences for Gina Tilley's family 6/9
This week Tony Dixon, a mesh surgeon in Bristol, faces a GMC hearing for misconduct. He may have harmed hundreds across both NHS and private sectors: 7/9
Most private hospitals lack proper overnight cover and don't have intensive care. When things go wrong patients can be "A&E dumped" in the local NHS Trust. On avg 550 patients a month are admitted to NHS trusts from a private hospitals 8/9
With record waiting lists more and more people are paying to skip the queue. But they could be skipping vital safeguards too.
🚨 This weekend The Sunday Times paywall is down, meaning my and my colleagues back catalogue of incredible investigations and stories are FREE to read.
I thought I'd give you 5 stories I think deserve your time: 1/6
You hear a lot about bullying and racism within the NHS - rarely have I come across such a bad case as this at Barts that we published recently...
The Sunday Times is campaigning for victims of the sodium valproate drug disaster to get compensation. Why? Because the children and families are suffering like this: 🔓 3/6 thetimes.com/uk/healthcare/…
💔 Ryan and Emmie should have been watching baby Quinn grow up for the past 3 years. Instead, they've had to battle the NHS and its regulator to get the truth for Quinn who died at Nottingham Hospitals from care so bad it has been judged criminal: thetimes.com/uk/healthcare/…
Nottingham University Hospitals Trust was fined £1.67 million in a rare criminal prosecution by the CQC last week over Quinn's death and 2 other babies. But its first response to the couple's detailed 10-page dossier of evidence was a brutal 2 sentence email:
Quinn died after being starved of oxygen because his mother had a placental abruption - staff didn't give them safety advice, call logs went missing and medical records were incorrect. The trust was described as obstructive by the coroner. It admitted liability only last year.
🚨 INVESTIGATION: 1,540 children across England have been misdiagnosed by NHS hearing tests. Leaked @NHSEngland documents reveal concerns at 90 units. Insiders say NHSE hasn't acted despite evidence of the scale of harm 🧵1/8 thetimes.com/article/e23d4f…
Papers marked 'official sensitive, restricted and confidential' (🤣) detail widespread systemic failings in paediatric audiology testing. 480 children have been moderately or severely harmed, in other words left without hearing aids and at risk of permanent development delays 2/8
Health secretary @wesstreeting was only briefed about the crisis on Friday last week...he told me: "This is an appalling state of affairs...it is outrageous that these failings will have potentially serious developmental consequences for children." 3/8 thetimes.com/article/e23d4f…
🚨 ICYMI in yesterday's print Sunday Times - One of England's largest and high profile NHS trusts @GSTTnhs may need a bail out from @DHSCgovuk to cover day to day spending. It is part of a wider £4.5bn spending crisis sweeping the NHS 🧵 1/7
Hospitals across England have been told to cut costs and consider closing some services. At @GSTTnhs staffing costs needed to be cut by a third in the year ahead, equivalent to £55 million with another £39 million in savings needed from other areas 2/7
If @GSTTnhs can't get control of an underlying £84m deficit it may need a loan from the NHS to cover costs. Info sent to staff below: 3/7
🚨 How did Salford Royal Hospital - dubbed the safest in England - fail to investigate the death of a teenager and allow a dangerous surgeon to continue operating for 7 years, harming dozens of patients?
I've been asking questions for 8 yrs. Let me tell you about it...🧵1/9
In 2007, Catherine O'Connor died after losing 14 litres of blood. An expert review in 2022 said spinal surgeon John Bradley Williamson's “unacceptable and unjustifiable” actions “directly contributed” to her death. Read more here: 2/9 thetimes.co.uk/article/surgeo…
A major report by a barrister brought in to examine Salford Royal's handling of concerns about Williamson was published this week. It details significant governance failures by Salford Royal when Sir David Dalton was CEO 3/9
🚨 INVESTIGATION: Top NHS boss Sir David Dalton was warned about a 'butcher' surgeon in 2014 harming patients. Now his victims want a full recall of patients, backed by a whistleblower doctor who says he knows more have been harmed 🧵1/7 thetimes.co.uk/article/cd69ae…
Spinal surgeon John Bradley Williamson harmed dozens of patients in botched surgery at Salford Royal, Spire Manchester and Manchester Children's Hospital. Injuries includes misplaced spinal screws, catastrophic bleeding, paralysis and disability 2/7
A review of patients over a 5 year period found multiple cases of harm. Now victims say all his patients should be reviewed.
Michelle Nolan takes morphine daily for pain and has been told by Spire her care was sub-standard "People deserve the truth, lives have been ruined" 3/7