Hospital pays family compensation for negligence

July 2nd, 2009

Hospital pays family compensation for negligence

A hospital has apologised to a family and agreed to pay compensation following an incident in which a man died.

Gary Rayner, 46, went into Sunderland Royal Hospital on June 26th 2007 for a routine operation on his lymph nodes after previously beating cancer, the Sunderland Echo reports.

However, on June 30th, Mr Rayner began sweating profusely and then went into cardiac arrest.

Although a crash team was called, they could not resuscitate him and he died at 23:00 BST.

A subsequent investigation revealed that staff failed to provide anti-clotting drugs until June 28th, by which time it was too late for the patient.

Les Boobis, medical director and consultant surgeon of City Hospitals Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust, gave evidence to support this and it was ruled that Mr Rayner’s family should receive compensation.

A spokesperson for the hospital said a compensation settlement had been agreed with the family of the deceased.

Clinical negligence occurs when a professional in the health service provides care that is deemed to be below standard and this causes physical injury, death or distress.
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Clinical negligence ‘affects three patients every month’

March 18th, 2009

Clinical negligence affects three patients every month

Three NHS patients every month are now receiving compensation of more than £1 million each because of failures in their care in hospital.

According to the Telegraph, almost 500 people have been seriously disabled by the lack of care they have received in hospital since the Clinical Negligence Scheme for NHS Trusts was established 13 years ago.

Groups representing patients have blamed "negligence, incompetence or carelessness" within the NHS for the increase in people being forced to make a claim to pay for their long-term care.

The biggest sum of compensation according to official records was £12.4 million, which was paid to Kerstin Parkin.

She was left brain damaged following errors made by staff during the birth of her baby and could not be resuscitated because the crash team did not have the security code for the emergency room door.

In order for a clinical negligence claim to be successful, a solicitor must establish that the surgeon breached a duty of care agreement between him or her and the patient.

Anyone who is unsure about a particular incident should seek legal advice.

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