GMC concerned about patient safety

September 10th, 2009

GMC concerned about patient safety

The General Medical Council (GMC) has warned that patients may be being put at risk because of a loophole in the system for checking the backgrounds of doctors from overseas.

A medical accident which led to the death of David Gray, 70, last year highlighted the issue of doctors who trained in other countries but now work in the NHS.

Mr Gray died after a German doctor, Daniel Ubani, administered a huge overdose of diamorphine – a drug he was not familiar with using.

European law means qualified doctors from other EU countries do not have their clinical competence tested before they work in the UK, even though training standards are not uniform across the EU.

However, a shortage of doctors means many NHS trusts have little option but to use medical professionals from other countries as locum cover.

Regulations governing freedom of movement of workers also mean that authorities in other EU countries do not have to supply the GMC with details of a doctor’s work history, meaning a medical professional who has been struck off may be able to obtain a job in the UK.

The GMC’s deputy chief executive Paul Philip told the Telegraph: "We can try to get as much information as we can – and we do – but there is no legal obligation for regulators to pass on information to us. We think that creates an unacceptable level of risk."

Any medical accidents resulting from this may lead to legal action and add to the NHS’s spending to settle compensation claims, which totalled £807 million in the 2008-09 financial year.ADNFCR-1694-ID-19354908-ADNFCR

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Mix-up leads to surgeons operating on wrong patient

August 24th, 2009

Mix-up leads to surgeons operating on wrong patient

Human error in an Essex hospital has led to the wrong patient being operated on, it has been revealed.

Staff at King George Hospital in Goodmayes made the mistake when two patients with the same name were treated on the same ward.

The victim endured a painful lung operation when it should have been given to the other man. It is not yet clear if he will be taking legal action against the hospital.

Joyce Robins, co-director of Patient Concern, commented: "The terrifying thing about this catalogue of disaster is that it is just the tip of the iceberg."

A spokesperson from the Department of Health insisted that patient safety is the NHS’s highest priority and claimed that 93 per cent of those treated are satisfied with their care.

Earlier this month, it was revealed that NHS compensation payouts for clinical negligence had risen by 22 per cent from 2008-09, amounting to some £807 million.

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Hospital ‘paid out more than £1m in compensation’

March 27th, 2009

Hospital paid out more than ٟm in compensation

The standards of care at an NHS hospital have been called into question after it was revealed that it paid out more than £1 million in compensation for clinical negligence cases last financial year.

Ipswich Hospital on Heath Road paid out £1,047,262 from 2007-08, however, this did not include one individual case in which a child was paid a substantial sum for brain damage, the Ipswich Evening Star reports.

Holly Goodwyn was left with brain damage, cerebral palsy and epilepsy after her birth in 1997 and the hospital paid her damages for inadequate care in 2008, but this came under the figures for the following financial year.

Jan Rowsell, spokesperson for Ipswich Hospital, denied that the standards of care fall below what can be reasonably expected by patients.

"Patient safety is our top priority and we work very hard to ensure incidents are as rare as they possibly can be," she stressed.

This follows reports earlier this month which showed that Swindon and Marlborough NHS Trust paid £3.6 million in compensation to a family in 2007 after admitting liability for an incident in which a child was left disabled.

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