🚨 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.
📣 EXCLUSIVE: Every child in England left infertile by cancer treatment will be given the chance to become a parent, thanks to a multi-million pound new service and cutting edge science backed by @NHSEngland from next year 🧵 1/4 thetimes.co.uk/article/3842c6…
For more than a decade NHS teams have been offering fertility preservation on a near pro-bono basis, working in their own time. But not everywhere did it. Now 750 children a year will get help. Three babies have already been born and another is on the way 2/4
It is amazing what the NHS can now do. The treatment works not just for cancer but also sickle cell patients needing bone marrow transplants and children with other conditions where their fertility can be affected 3/4
🚨 EXCLUSIVE: Internal NHS reports reveal hospital buildings are at imminent risk of "catastrophic" collapse, with significant loss of life, as a result of crumbling concrete: thetimes.co.uk/article/school…
NHS managers could face charges under corporate manslaughter legislation, one report warns as another raises fears asbestos could be released meaning staff would need FFP3 masks (!)
Labour's @wesstreeting tells The Sunday Times, the docs reveal “a terrifying picture of the state of our hospitals after 13 years of Conservative neglect”. He said: “The Conservatives literally didn’t fix the roof when the sun was shining and now patients’ safety is at risk.”
🚨 INVESTIGATION: How #LucyLetby - Britain's worst child killer - was promised a role at Alder Hey Children's Hospital by managers who dismissed fears she was a killer.
After successfully persuading the Countess of Chester Hospital that she was being victimised by doctors, managers offered her support for a masters degree or training as an advanced nurse. Letby had a 'victim statement' read to the trust board 2/7
The Sunday Times has seen the grievance report into her case that details how managers wanted to "protect her from allegations" as well as board minutes, emails and previously unseen evidence showing how the trust board was misled and turned against doctors 3/7
The social care crisis is leading to deaths. This coroner's report details one potentially avoidable death due to a delayed discharge from hospital. The warning has been sent to @SteveBarclay
And the delayed discharges cause ambulances stacking outside A&E delaying patients being seen. That is killing people too. Another coroner's report:
And even when patients get into A&E delays to be seen are leading to deaths. Here a coroner reports on a 9 hour delay for a woman who later died to be clinically assessed
🚨 Exclusive: Rishi Sunak to announce a £1bn cash injection to fix NHS staffing crisis delivering thousands of extra nurses & doctors over 15 years - but the £1bn is only part of the cost with the rest of the plan unfunded. Story with @HarryYorke1 thetimes.co.uk/article/rishi-… 1/4
No.10 is still working on the plan, but it is expected to announce a doubling of medical school places for doctors to 15,000 by 2028-29. It will also promise 24,000 nurses and midwives by 2030 & 2k more trainee GPs #workforceplan 2/4 thetimes.co.uk/article/rishi-…
In a change to the way these things normally go, @Jeremy_Hunt has backed more investment while @SteveBarclay has pushed hard on the NHS signing up to efficiencies. Treasury officials resisted fully funding the plan 3/4 thetimes.co.uk/article/rishi-…
Exclusive: Hospices are warning more people could die alone, without pain relief, as soaring costs and flat NHS funding means hospices are closing beds and making staff redundnant to fill a £186m blackhole 1/n thetimes.co.uk/article/e801b5…@hospiceuk#PalliativeCare
“The hospice sector is subsidising the government’s health and social care system,” said Toby Porter who warned closing services would have consequences for the NHS as people face A&E admissions or dying on busy acute wards. 3/n thetimes.co.uk/article/e801b5…