Princess Alexandra Hospital subject to nearly £1 million gynaecology medical negligence claims and pay-outs
Health / Sat 30th Nov 2024 at 10:49am
THE Princess Alexandra Hospital NHS Trust (PAHT) has pledged to learn from a series of gynaecology medical negligence claims and pay-outs totalling almost £1 million.

Data has revealed 20 complaints against the trust, which provides services at the PAH in Harlow as well as Herts and Essex Hospital in Bishop’s Stortford and St Margaret’s Hospital in Epping.
As a result of the reports to NHS Resolution, the legal arm of the NHS, PAHT has settled 12 gynaecology negligence claims with damages totalling £946,688 – not including NHS or claimant legal costs.
It is the highest amount paid out of all Hertfordshire and West Essex NHS trusts.
Chief nurse at PAHT, Sharon McNally said: “Patient safety is our absolute priority and we are committed to ensuring that our patients receive high-quality care and treatment.
“We apologise to the patients affected by these cases and have ensured that our learning from these incidents is part of our focus on continuous improvement.”
The findings come as a new report from the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) reveals women are left in “debilitating” pain for years, with more than 760,0000 on the waiting list for appointments due to a gynaecology care “crisis”.
In it, experts are calling for extra funding to speed up treatment.
The RCOG report adds: “Gynaecology has historically been perceived as less important in wider elective recovery, and this has resulted in an increasing number of complex cases, disease progression, emergency admissions and women living in pain and distress, all of which are preventable.”
Medical Negligence Assist’s investigation revealed that 272 claims lodged across the NHS for failure and delays in gynaecology-related diagnosis have cost £32.6m since 2019.
Standard response as always lessons, will be learned etc. They never are ad people continue to suffer. Until people are fired for these issues and struck off they will continue. Start with senior management responsible, as they set the standards, follow up with people directly responsible. Only when people are held to account will the disaster that is the NHS get better. I would start with the Chief Nurse obviously her position is now untenable £1M in tax payers money due negligence is astounding (it should be paid by the nurses, dr, managers pension funds that would focus the mind). I bet that is the tip of the iceberg as well when we had issues in the birth of my son it was all blamed on a student mid wife and notes were lost etc. Most people decide not to follow up.
I think you have hit the nail on the head Adam. When I've been in hospital the care provided by the nursing staff has been excellent but the joining up of the dots has been abysmal I cannot see the new system will help matters at all if nobody bothers to check the patient's notes. My last stay in hospital was for 4 days and in that time I saw 7 doctors and a specialist none of whom could come up with a diagnosis and every time I had to repeat myself. For goodness sake look at the patient's notes and listen to what they tell you. My resting pulse rate is normally 47-49 so prior to my admission to A&E it had nearly reached 200 was not normal all I got was a" pulse rate of 60-120" is normal. So although I told doctors and nurses this was well above my norm nobody listened
The whole NHS is failing. The people at the pointy end are underpaid and the people at the blunt end are over paid. When ever change is attempted they just higher more people at the blunt end to look into things and once these people are higher they never get rid of them. It’s funny that they struggle to retain staff at the sharpe end as they can earn double working in other countries, yet would be managers are falling over themselves to get the overpaid blunt positions. This will never change without high level government intervention by someone who will take responsibility as the blunt end people will never reduce their lot. Unfortunately government people are always avoiding responsibility. The golden rule of all government and public services is “ do not use adjectives” as this implies you will do something. On a personal note a relative of mine had to be rushed to hospital on Friday due to not being able to get care they should have got through their GP but could not due to red tape for want of a better word. They are still in assesment and stable.We were told on Friday evening that there would not be any doctors available till Monday. This is scary as even if you are wealthy, you only have the NHS in an emergency!
I used their A&E service, I would be afraid to be sent there again and I hope to find a way to never return to that place in case of an emergency. There is something off happening there, that is substandard, and I genuinely hope some NHS audit will look into it. If that hospital is not fit for purpose, due to staff qualifications, treatment or capacity issues, it should be reviewed as soon as possible before more damage is done, but one thing is clear the hospital and Nhs should take responsibility
I am currently suffering severe nerve damage after a gynae procedure at this hospital and was left unable to walk for 1 month! I have tried to make a complaint via PALS and they have ignored my emails. This is a very concerning hospital and I would advise anyone to choose elsewhere if you have a gynae refferal.
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