Exclusive: Rob Behrens says ministers and health leaders are doing too little to end ‘cover-up culture’ in England

Hospitals are cynically burying evidence about poor care in a “cover-up culture” that leads to avoidable deaths, and families being denied the truth about their loved ones, the NHS ombudsman has warned.

Ministers, NHS leaders and hospital boards are doing too little to end the health service’s deeply ingrained “cover-up culture” and victimisation of staff who turn whistleblower, he added.

Avoidable deaths are too common, especially in maternity care, mental health and cases of sepsis (blood poisoning).

The NHS sometimes does “dreadful” and “cynical” things in obstructing families’ pursuit of the full facts about a death, including lying and concealing evidence.

The service’s legal “duty of candour” was not forcing hospitals to be open when things went wrong.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Train strikes to resume despite hopes of breakthrough

Second strike of week begins after TSSA union accepts pay deal with…

NHS leaders warn of service cuts as hospital energy bills soar

Costs expected to rise by £2m a month for some English trusts,…