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April 14th 2003
TYPES & CAUSES OF MEDICAL MISTAKES 

We wish to stress that the majority of patients in the UK receive good care , and  every family in the land has good reason to be thankful to the medical profession. However, it is obvious that health professionals are human and  with the best will in the world, mistakes will occur. This has at last been acknowledged. The only people who have insisted they are infallible have been the the doctors themselves - patients  have always known that they make mistakes.

The Chief Medical Officer published research
estimating that one patient in ten will experience a medical error when attending a hospital ( this does not include GP errors). This amounts to 800,000 victims of errors per year. Most result in minor and reversible damage, whilst others cause death and permanent injury.

Prof. Charles Vincent, [March 2001] investigated 1,000 medical records
from two unnamed hospitals for mistakes, and then extrapolated his findings to cover the whole of the UK. He estimated that 68,000 deaths per year are caused through medical errors, of these 34,000 were terminally ill patients and would have died anyway, leaving 34,000 patients who die needlessly every year. The equivalent of two jumbo jets crashing every week. His figures estimated that 46,000 were left with serious and permanent injuries. [ This did not include GP errors and their consequences] Obviously, everything that can be done to reduce errors should be done. We understand that iatrogenesis is the the third cause of illness and the third cause of death in UK medicine. Urgent research is needed into the effects and consequences of iatrogenic damage on the patient victims and the health professionals involved.

 Types  of medical Errors: a patient could receive one or a combination of these

1. Misdiagnosis: According to the Chief Medical Officer, in his Paper " Organisation with a     Memory" - 55% of errors are caused by misdiagnosis. If the  diagnosis is wrong, then appropriate medical care will not be forthcoming. On the basis of these figures can we draw the conclusion that 55% of all error deaths and 55% of all iatrogenic injury stem from  mis-diagnoses? -  e.g. John's, Des's, Gillian's, Helen's  cases etc.

2.    Inappropriate medication -  eg. Helen's case causing tremendous physical damage

3.    Inaccurate dosage -
eg.  Art & Vicki  McConnell ,lost their only child, 9 year old
Lexie, when she was given 80 mgs of corticsteroid,Prednisolone. The maximum dosage for an adult was 60mgs per day according to the British National Formulary, and this would only be given for very serious life threatening conditions. Lexie,  child, received this massive overdose for a straightforward, easily treatable eye infection. Her parents were not warned that her immune system would be severely compromised. In fact it collapsed and Lexie caught chicken pox and died in less than 6 weeks in 1992. It was then acknowledged that all she needed for her mild eye infection, was a standard antibiotic

4.    Surgical errors/blunders - Bristol babies, Ledward, Neale, Janet's case.

5.    Inappropriate ( wrong) surgery  -
removal of healthy kidney, healthy breast etc  Jennifer Cormack had a double mastectomy following  errors by doctors at the Royal London Hospital Whitechapel in 1985. It was not until 1994 that she was informed of the error, she did not have cancer!. It took until October 2000 for her to receive compensation.. Graham Reeves, 70, had the wrong kidney ( healthy) removed by surgeons at the Prince Philip Hospital in Llanelli. His diseased kidney then had to be removed at Swansea's Morriston Hospital, he died in intensive care. March 2000

6.    Inappropriate treatment or test -
can delay the correct diagnosis, leading to greater damage or death. eg. 41 year old Steve Harley from Barnsley South Yorkshire who was misdiagnosed by different doctors on 19 separate occasions 4 different GPs, 5 hospital doctors and 3 specialists. From July 1999 he suffered excruciating throat pain - but, inexplicably, in spite of a range of tests and scans, 22 examinations in all - nothing showed up. Apparently these scans never quite covered the affected area! - Eventually discovered he had huge inoperable throat cancer. Steve eventually lost part of his tongue, and his larynx. e.g. John's  case.
 
7.    No appropriate treatment or test given - lack of care -  Des's & Gillian's case.     Phoebe Birdseye 5 year old - swallowed tack which stuck in throat. This was surgically
removed. However, child developed an abscess because she was not given any antibiotics, a routine clinical procedure. In spite of of parents ringing alarm bells  - several doctor failed to give appropriate tests. Phoebe died when abscess burst and closed her windpipe at Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham in July 2002

8.    Procedure incorrectly performed or Incorrect procedure eg.
Wayne Jowett,
Queen's Medical Centre,  Nottingham - spinal injection which should have been an  intravenous injection  - caused agonising death over two weeks in February 2001. Julia's case

9.    Error(s) in Medical Records,  including omissions- very frequent, leading to major problems.

10.   Equipment failure -
D.o.H's first national audit of hospital equipment found that more than a third of life saving machinery is dangerously old.
 
11.    Poor hygiene - leading to infection.
5,000 lose their lives each year due to hospital caught infections.

Causes of Medical Errors 

1.    Simple human error -
We have all completed routine tasks successfully and yet there
       comes an occasion when for no apparent reason, a mistake occurs.

2.    Intense stress: difficult decisions to be made and unpleasant sights to cope with.
 
We are aware that doctors have special and very important work - they are often dealing     with life and death situations. When most people make a mistake at work it may be serious but it is unlikely to be life-threatening. Although doctors are trained to disengage their emotions, good doctors must retain some contact with their humanity and relate to the patient as a fellow human being. The burden of responsibility at times must be very heavy indeed.

3.    Tiredness as a result of excessively long hours on call. This occurs especially amongst Junior doctors and should be rectified.

4.    Inadequate supervision: junior or trainee doctors should not be expected to perform
beyond their field of competence. This is a failure of senior staff to take responsibility for     juniors. Night sessions, weekends and national holiday times are all likely to have reduced senior and consultant cover. itr is at these times that medcial errors are msot likely. It took over 6 hours for a consultant to reach little Phoebe Birdseye on a Saturday, in spite of obvious distress, and when he did it was too late.

5      Inadequate training: we believe that the majority of medical errors are caused by poorly trained and poorly supervised junior staff.

6.    Work overload - systems failure

7.    Poor communications:
doctors & nurses receiving the wrong medication or information

8.    Inadequate support staff :systems failure: lack of resources

9.    Physical or mental illness / personal stress of health professional: work below par

10    Infections:
not following proper procedures.

11.    Inadequate skills - incompetence & negligence not recognised by individual  doctor eg. Rodney Ledward & Richard Neale

12.    Poor attitude:
laziness, failure to keep up with developments in a speciality, complacency and arrogance. Failure to write down accurate symptoms, test results, case histories, checking equipment, checking medication, reading instructions etc etc-
 sheer carelessness.

SIN believes that whatever the cause of the medical error the patient or family should receive compensation for any resultant death or serious, permanent injury. SIN believes that personal responsibility is a moral obligation.
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April 14th 2003
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT THAT  DENIAL & COVER UPS EXIST
No health professional rushes around to inform the relatives or the patient that they have been the victim of a medical error which has caused death or serious injury.The relatives or patients find themselves fighting for the truth, justice and medical care. They are isolated, traumatised and stranded in a 'no man's land'. Iatrogenic patients find themselves in limbo: overnight they have become the modern-day leper, or 'hot potato'. No one wants to deal with an iatrogenic patient, for to give them appropriate medical care would be to acknowledge that damage has occurred and/or pay compensation, so the only thing to do is to begin a 'denial and cover-up' strategy.That iatrogenic patients are denied care and become the victims of  cruel and wicked cover-ups has, at last, been acknowledged.

First time:
SIN was the first organisation to make such an assertion in its 'Aims & Objective' in Nov. 1998. " .....there is evidence that doctors subsequently deny patients appropriate treatment to cover-up their colleagues' incompetence and/or negligent mistakes. One theory is that appropriate treatment to remedy iatrogenic damage could possibly lead to a successful complaint and/or disciplinary action and/or.... medical negligence litigation, [and even criminal charges]"

Second Time
The Health Select Committee in June 1999 held an investigation into "Adverse medical Incidents & Their Outcomes" and took evidence, written and oral, from almost three hundred patients involved in serious medical errors. The accounts of the experiences of some of the most vulnerable citizens in Britain, were horrific. An Observer headline on Sunday, 24  October 1999 was: "Doctors blacklist complaining patients." based on the findings of the Health Select Committee. This article also promoted SIN as a patient support and pressure group to fight against this victimisation.  If doctors blacklist patients this means that they are being denied their lawful right to medical care, including specialist care! Not only is this unlawful, we believe it to be criminal.

Third Time:
Alan Milburn, Secretary of State for Health on the D.o.H. website dated..10th July 2001, stated that "...mistakes are hidden and cover ups  can occur." If a cover-up is in progress then the truth cannot be told and so misleading and dangerously inaccurate statements are made; test results are falsified, documents are changed or go missing, and derogatory remarks are written on patients' records to discredit the patient.

Fourth Time:
In a leaked document from the D.o.H., extracts published in  the Daily Mail dated 28th December 2001, " Haunted by 50 scandals a year .....the NHS expects up to 50 scandals a year in which doctors have maimed or killed patients in botched operations [misdiagnoses] or subjected them to verbal [written ], physical or sexual abuse...."
To the shame of the D.o.H.- these scandals are not exposed, they are suppressed.

Fifth Time:
Lord Woolf, himself, recognised that victims of a medical error can be denied medical care stating, in his inaugural  lecture 17th January 2001 : "They [doctors]  needed to recognise that because patients felt they had been a victim of medical malpractice, this did not justify withdrawing treatment...."

"The patient has the right to the truth about their medical condition and such cover-ups are obviously unethical, in some cases criminal, and can never be defended or justified. It is disgraceful in a so-called democratic and civilised country that such a pivotal profession must lie".  quote from SIN's Paper 3 " Balancing the Scales : SIN's case for a Victim's Compensation Fund" para 2.11  submitted to D.o.H. March 2002.

April 14th 2003

WHY HAS THE DENIAL & COVER-UP CULTURE BEEN ALLOWED TO THRIVE?
Cover ups are easy to initiate, maintain and are  very convenient!

SIN believe that there are several reasons why this disgraceful and unhealthy practice thrives:

1. Instinctive human reaction by a health professional to deny and cover up a grave medical error which has caused death or very serious permanent injury to a patient. All health professionals who have the misfortune to be in this situation should receive counselling, many will be in a state of shock. However, the needs of the patient must  be paramount and they too should receive counselling.

2. The unethical, misguided professional allegiance which  exists within the medical profession: the 'closing of the ranks syndrome'. The idea that you do not 'shop' your colleagues, even though a colleague could be incompetent and damaging patients and in urgent need of retraining and help. ' There ,but for the grace of God, go I', is the mistaken philosophy. As long as no one breaks ranks, then on one needs to be held responsible for incompetence or malpractice. Such misguided  professional allegiance is now known to have protected several notorious doctors who were maiming and killing patients for years in spite of many colleagues being fully aware of the damage they were wreaking on patients eg. Ledward, Neale, Wisheart & Dasmardan. As long as such allegiance remains rock solid, it ensures that the medical profession can lead a comfortable life, free from accountability and responsibility. The hatred of anyone breaking ranks  can be seen in the way  whistle blowers are treated, the best known example is, of course, Dr. Steve Bolsin who was denied any further  work in the UK and was forced to go Australia. Denial of work is a common punishment for whistle blowing health professionals.

3. The professionals hold the power. It is very easy to orchestrate a cover-up which is always well planned and deliberate. Our medical records are under their control and not ours. Critical documents can be removed and 'lost', others can be changed. Tests can be falsified and dangerously misleading or inaccurate statements can be made. Furthermore, it is usual for derogatory remarks to be written in order to discredit the patient. In this way cover-ups can be maintained. Doctors seem unperturbed by the fact that such actions prevent  seriously ill patients from obtaining desperately needed specialist care and indeed put lives at risk. The trauma of the victims cannot be overstated.

4.   Clinical judgement is infallible. It does not matter what a doctor writes, it can be untrue or complete nonsense - no one is allowed to challenge clinical judgement. The myth of clinical infallibility has surely been exploded? With 34,000 needless deaths  and 46.000 patients seriously and permanently damaged
per year by medical errors - it is obvious that it is very necessary to challenge clinical judgement. After all, 55% of clinical errors are misdiagnoses. Lord Woolf, in his Inaugural Lecture, January 17th 2001, described this as the courts being "... excessively deferential to the Medical Profession ..".and bestowing the profession with "..unwarranted assumption of beneficence..." , the final conclusion being:  "the courts can no longer rely on  hospitals and the medical profession to resolve patients justified complaints justly...."

5.    Cover- ups are convenient and  advantageous to  the Health Authorities and Trusts : a blind eye is turned to patients with serious clinical complaints. No impartial, thorough investigation is ever carried out. Such actions ensures that they will not be liable for compensation and nor will they have to deal with the vexed problem of incompetent or malpractising doctors. Health professionals are instructed that they must not acknowledge that a serious error with damage has occurred  - they have a duty of allegiance to the Trust. Lord Woolf explained in his Inaugural Lecture, January 17th 2001, that from the inception of the NHS a decision was made that compensation claims must be resisted.  To this end, cover-ups are very useful and all challenges in  the courts will be defended to excess, despite the merits of the individual case. No regard for the tax-payer's money nor respect for justice and truth, let alone the needs of the iatrogenic patient and their relatives. The result of this policy has been dire to the NHS where for decades there has been little or no accountability or quality control.

SIN reiterates: "patients can cope with the original mistake, it is the subsequent denial and cover-up -  the deceit and the lies - that cause the real trauma Such cover-ups are cruel and wicked to the patient victims and indeed must have a deleterious effect on the psychological well being of doctors and nurses who purport to be part of a caring profession".

"The patient has the right to the truth about their medical condition and such cover-ups are obviously unethical, and in some cases criminal, and can never be defended or justified. It is disgraceful that in a so-called democracy and civilised country that such a pivotal profession must lie. This 50 years of a 'denial and cover up' culture has resulted in a continual lowering of standards because there has been little or no quality control or accountability. The result has been that the care being provided to British nationals, has been shown to be amongst the lowest in Western Europe for the major specialities".
quotes from SIN's 'Open letter' in our Aims & Objectives. & from Paper 3 'Balancing the Scales: SIN's case fro a Victim's Compensation Fund' para. 2.11 March 2002

SIN suggests the removal of three main barriers to rid us of this obnoxious denial and cover up culture:
(1) Abolition of misguided professional allegiance:
The removal of this barrier preventing iatrogenic patients from receiving the truth and the care to which they are entitled, -  lies in the hands of the medical profession. The bullying and the intimidation of whilstle blowers and would-be whistle blowers must stop. Surely it is time for the good doctors with integrity to stand up and be counted? The interests of the patient must come first.

(2) NHS''s control over our medical notes must cease: The removal of this second barrier to the truth and appropriate medical care is SIN's suggestion "...that the statutory rights of patients must include copies of all medical records (including test results) being available after any consultation on request checked, signed and dated by the patient. This would prevent the propagation of inaccurate information, prevent any retrospective changing; and would be a protection for both doctor and patient".
SIN's 'Aims & Objectives' 1999
(3)Iatrogenic patients must stop being perceived as potential litigants: Cover ups are advantageous to the NHS. Cover ups hinder and prevent successful compensation claims. Introduction of a 'Victim's Compensation Fund' is urgently required. The iatrogenic patient, being perceived as a potential litigant, means that any appropriate care or treatment is considered as giving the innocent iatrogenic victim evidence to support their claim of iatrogenic damage. In this way the  damaged patient's medical care is jeopardise4 and lives are put at risk.  

Removal of this third barrier would be achieved by the introduction of a 'Victim's Compensation Fund' as a matter of urgency.  SIN has been advocating this for the last four years.
"A victim's compensation fund will transform the present culture of denial and cover-up to one of openness and honesty when mistakes are readily admitted. Irrespective of the cause of the iatrogenic damage, the patient has a right to the truth and should receive appropriate compensation.  The establishment of such an initiative will be a milestone in the history of the NHS and will revolutionise the equity of the doctor/patient relationship, bringing the UK into step with its European counterparts and the NHS into the 21st. century. All this will mean changing the "mindset" of 50 years. This new approach to iatrogenic damage is imperative to ensure that the basic human right to adequate health care is upheld. ( Article 25 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, UN 10.12.48). Quote for SIN's Paper 3 'Balancing the Scales: Case for a Victim's Compensation Fund'  
concluding para. 7.3  submitted to D.o.H. March 2002

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12th April 2003
SOS - HANDS OFF OUR MEDICAL RECORDS
SIN has been campaigning 4 years for the rights of patients to have control over their medical records. Accurate medical records are vital for good health care. Inaccurate medical records can put lives at risk and cause much unnecessary suffering. " Copies of all medical records to be to be available after any consultation on request. Checked, signed and dated by the patient and doctor. This will prevent subsequent changing of records and stop genuine mistakes and inaccurate information from being propagated."  SIN 'Aims & Objectives' 1999.

"Milburn scraps right to amend NHS Files"
Guardian Tuesday, February 25th 2003 by David Henke, Westminster correspondent.

The above article was brought to our attention by several concerned individuals and appeared in the Guardian at the end of February. Extracts from the article will be written in black,  comments by SIN in red. The article appears to be rather muddled and covers issues of amendments by patients, charges for copying records and time for access.

" Alan Milburn, the Health Secretary has reneged on a government  pledge to allow NHS patients the right to correct inaccurate facts or opinions held on their medical records.

Patients were given the legal right to amend their medical records in the 1990 Medical Records Act under Section 6 (b).

This Act stated: Section 6 (1) " Where a person considers that any information contained in a health record, or any part of a health record, to which he/she has been given access under section 3(c) ...is inaccurate, he may apply to the holder of the record for the necessary correction to be made.

(2) On an application under subsection (1)above, the holder of the record shall -
(a) if he is satisfied that the information is inaccurate, make the necessary correction;
(b) if he is not so satisfied, make in the part of the record in which the information is contained a note of the matters in respect of which the information is considered by the applicant to be inaccurate; and
(c) in either case, without requiring any fee, supply the applicant with a copy of the correction or note.

(3) In this section "inaccurate" means incorrect, misleading or incomplete.

In our experience doctors usually do refuse to change the offending record , even if evidence is produced to show that there are factual inaccuracies in the record. In fact, doctors mostly refuse even to enter into any discussion on the matter.
 
This Section 6(b) note gave the patient  the statutory right to attach, to the offending record, their version of events. This could be a factual error or a difference of opinion. The original record must be kept for legal reasons. Obviously, the problem is  how can the patient be sure that their version remained attached, and what can the patient do if the offending record has been sent to other 'record holders'? It becomes a mammoth task for sick patients to ensure that their version is  sent to all the health professionals involved in their care. In the case of iatrogenic patients the  misleading and dangerously inaccurate statements can be legion. It is always the inaccurate statements that are copied and widely dispersed.

In our experience the 6(b) note made by the patient was held in little regard. One member reported that in her efforts to get her records corrected she had used her legal right to amend her records and was horrified to find when she went to court,  the MDU, which was defending the action she was bringing, brought her records to the court minus her 6(b) notes. Therefore, they could  not be used in evidence to support her case. No explanation was given as to where her 6(b) notices had gone: they had mysteriously disappeared.

We then move on to 'The Data Protection Act 1998 ( DPA) which also contains a section on Medical Records. The DPA supersedes the Access to Health Records Act 1990 which has been repealed, except for bereaved relatives and their right to access their dead relatives' medical records.  The DPA covers all personal data kept in manual or computerised form. Such data covers both facts and opinions held about an individual. The Data Controller has a statutory obligation that whatever data is held on an individual must be accurate. The individual data subject ( patient) can request for correction, providing the data is incorrect or misleading about a matter of fact, or contains an opinion based on data which is factually inaccurate or misleading. In such cases the Controller is obliged by law to correct, erase, destroy or block  the use of such information. Opinions cannot be challenged unless they are based on wrong facts.

The DPA does not appear to allow patients themselves to add a Section 6(b) type notice. In our experience such Section 6(b) type notices were held in little regard by doctors or hospitals. Therefore, if the Trust or Heath Authorities are now obliged by Law to correct inaccurate records, this would seem to be an improvement. However, if they refuse to comply then the patient can seek advice from the Data Protection Information Commissioner, who can force the Trust or HA to correct the records. But the Information Commissioner has discretionary powers and may not act in favour of the patient, who would then have to resort to Court action.

The newspaper article seems to suggest that the Secretary of State had promised to rectify this and to allow patients the right once again to correct their own notes as was in, the  now obsolete, Access to Health Records Act of 1990. The article goes on to say:

 " The advice ignores pledges by Home Office Ministers to allow patients to be able to add notes to their records, correcting false facts or opinions, and for a fast track service.
     The then Home Office Minister, Lord Bassam, told parliament that the new guidance " will make clear that data controllers should allow individuals to include a statement of their views on the relevant records, if they disagree with the content of those records."

 It is this promise that appears to have been reneged upon, it was however, guidance only and not in statute as it had been under section 6(b) in the 1990 Access to Health Record Act.   On balance,  SIN believes is is better to have the consultants and doctors, through the Trusts and HAs, forced by law  to correct inaccurate factual and misleading comments. These new correct statements should be signed by the appropriate doctor and issued on official NHS paper. The Trusts and HAs are also obliged by law to erase, destroy or block any inaccurate data and, therefore, we conclude that it is the data controller's statutory duty to notify all other holders of the inaccurate data that this incorrect data is to be 'corrected, erased, destroyed or blocked' and replaced by the accurate data. Notification should be sent acknowledging that the correct data has been officially received, the patient to be informed.

It seems from the article that costs of obtaining medical Records, the time for access are also under discussion as well as the effect on our medical records of the coming Freedom of Information Act .

" The Department of Health guidance has set up an advisory committee - the Health Records and Data Protection Review Group - to discuss in secret whether to increase charges that can be levied by doctors.

The Department of Health is also discussing in secret plans to increase charges, originally set at a maximum of £10 to £50 or more for people to get their records. A plan to allow people "fast track" access to their records in 21 rather than 40 days has been dropped.

The Department's action is to be raised at a meeting of the advisory committee on implementing the Freedom of Information Act, set up by Lord Irvine, the Lord Chancellor, to monitor developments in Whitehall.

Details emerged after the Campaign for Freedom of Information Pressure Group obtained new Department of Health guidance, advising HAs and GP practices what information should be available to patients under the Data Protection Act".
[ Surely patients should have access to all their medical records?]

" When Maurice Frankel, Director of the Campaign for Freedom of Information, asked for papers on the discussions, he was refused by Raj Kaur, the civil servant chairing the group, because " this would harm the frankness and candour of internal discussion".

"Mr Frankel said yesterday : " It seems astonishing collapse of accountability for all these commitments - made in a consultation document, in correspondence with us in correspondence with a peer and in ministerial undertakings to parliament - to be broken."

" The Department of Health yesterday initially defended its decisions to keep secret discussions on charging and patients' rights until the committee reports later this year. But facing potential criticisms form the Lord Chancellor's Department , which does publish the minutes of advisory committees on Freedom of Information, a ministry spokesman later said: " Some information may now be made public."

One thing we can be sure of: - no individual patient support groups will be represented on these committees. It is most likely that the BMA, the MDU  the GMC, the Confederation for Hospital Managers, NHS Complaints Personnel, and Medico-legal Firms will have full committee representation.

With regards to charging: under the old Access to Health Records Act 1990 - viewing of Records was free. The time scale for receiving copies of records varied from 21 days to 40 Provided the patient had been seen by the Trust or the GP within the previous 21 days, then the patient could expect to obtain their records within 21 days. Otherwise, the wait was 40 days. More often than not the Trusts, GPs and HAs broke the law by not complying with the statutary deadline. There was a £10 basic fee and after that each GP surgery, Trust or HA was able to charge a 'reasonable ' fee. This varied considerably from 5p a sheet to 25p a sheet or more.

Under the DPA a patient is entitled to inspect their medical records. At the moment the maximum charge for copies for manual records appears to be £50. The Data Controller must supply the information in 'permanent form'. This normally means a print -out or photocopy, but could also include copies of microfiches, x-rays or audio/video cassettes - it is expected that these will cost extra, the exact cost is not yet known. The Data Controller should normally give access within 40 days. Any unintelligible terms or data, such as computer codes, must be explained. The patient does not need to say why they want it. The Data Controller cannot refuse access because you might use the data to criticise the controller, complain or take legal action. This seems to be an important step forward in patients' gaining control over their own medical records.

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12th April 2003
Tax - Payer pays 3 times over for compensation claim

One case that has come to our attention involved a patient who was severely disabled through inappropriate surgery. She became disabled, and because her mobility was greatly restricted, she lost her career. The stress of the experience caused the break down of her long standing relationship and she was forced to go onto state benefits as she fought through the courts her claim for considerable compensation.

At one point, without warning or explanation, her state benefits were stopped. Mysteriously the computer showed no record of any previous payments. She was in danger of loosing her home because she had no income on which to live. It took her 18 months and great distress before she was able to reach an Appeals Tribunal. At this Tribunal the medical advisers refused even to look at her evidence and said that her benefits would be re-instated immediately. Why were they ever stopped in the first place? No explanation was ever given.

This patient was entitled to and received Legal Aid. She battled with incompetent solicitors, being forced to change from one firm to another during her legal battle. After eleven years of unbelievable stress she won her case. The Health Authority had made several offers which she had refused, and then three days before the case was to come to court they agreed to make a favourable settlement.

We, the tax-payer have paid out three time over for this patient's justifiable compensation. The Health Authority, or the  NHS Litigation Authority must have been fully aware from day one that they were liable for compensation, yet in the words of Lord Woolf, they defended the case to excess, regardless of the merits. They defended the indefensible causing enormous unnecessary distress to the patient.

The tax-payer paid three times over:

1. The lawyers of the Health Authority were paid for their long drawn out unnecessary and unethical defence.

2. The Legal Aid Board used tax-payer's money to pay for the patient's Legal Aid for 11 years.

3. Finally, the tax-payer paid out for justifiable compensation!!

What a profligate waste of tax-payer's money for which  the Health Authority should be held accountable
WHEN WILL THE VICTIM'S COMPENSATION FUND BE INTRODUCED?
IT IS LONG OVERDUE!


14th. April 2003
BBC Website Report on  SIN's London Demonstration, 15th April 2002

Medical Error Victims Call For Action
Victims of medical errors have called for the government to provide better protection for patients. A group of around 50 campaigners handed a petition to the Department of Health on Monday, 15th April 2002. They say doctors must be made more accountable, and patients must be given better access to the facts of their treatment.

The Demonstration was organised by the pressure group Sufferers of Iatrogenic Neglect
 ( SIN)
.
 SIN founder member Gillian Bean said:

" The unpalatable truth is that the victim of a medical blunder will find that their ensuing health care has been put into jeopardy because to give remedial care would be to disclose the fact that damage has occurred, thereby giving evidence for a potential legal action.


" We want an end to the denial and cover-up culture. We want an open and honest culture in which doctors will be able to acknowledged their mistakes."

Soaring Costs: Ms Bean said in an effort to contain compensation pay outs, the NHS defended every case therefore sent legal costs soaring. In order to reduce the legal bill, SIN wants a victim's compensation fund to be set up.

Ms Bean said that the Chief Medical Officer has acknowledged that one in 10 patients attending hospitals will be subjected to a medical error. Recent research has estimated 34,000 people die needlessly each year in UK hospitals.

Marilyn Lewis, of Action Against Unnecessary Hysterectomy ( AAUH), said: " Having a womb is part of being a woman, and many of us can no longer have physical relationships. All of us feel we have been misled and betrayed by the medical profession."

Missing Files:  Ellen Williams. 46, from Liverpool, was implanted with HRT despite having endometriosis, or bleeding of the womb lining. She said: "HRT exacerbates the problem and now I bleed from the vagina and bowel, and have no womb. I have been unable to seek any sort of compensation because medical files mysteriously went missing and we have no evidence."

Derek Bye, of Poole, Dorset, became a member of Parents Recognition of Paediatric Errors  (PROPES). because his daughter suffered a reaction to an injection given for diagnosing a urine infection. "She has an inflammation of the brain and the consultant diagnosed epilepsy and prescribed drugs fro this condition. Despite the fact I was not at all happy with giving the drugs, I had to because they threatened to have her taken into care if I did not comply". His daughter died and the family was now helping police with manslaughter inquiries.
NET DOCTOR : htpp://www.netdoctor.co.uk/news/index

" Victims of medical errors have called for the government to provide better protection for patients. Around 50 campaigners have handed a petition to the Department of Health, saying that doctors must be made more accountable, and that patients must be given better access to the details of their treatment. The petition which was presented today ( 15th April 2002), was organised by the pressure group Sufferers of Iatrogenic Neglect. An iatrogenic illness is a condition caused by the treatment a patient receives".
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