logo
Britain's 'deadliest' hospitals: NHS Trusts where 'too many' patients are dying, official report shows - so where does YOURS rank?

Britain's 'deadliest' hospitals: NHS Trusts where 'too many' patients are dying, official report shows - so where does YOURS rank?

Daily Mail​2 days ago
NHS hospitals in England where patient fatalities are higher than expected have been revealed in an official report.
Worrying data shows that some NHS trusts have recorded over a quarter more patient deaths than expected between March 2024 and February this year.
Health service analysts said while this isn't a measure of poor care, records of elevated patient deaths serve as a 'smoke alarm' that can prompt further investigation.
The NHS report said eight trusts had a notably higher number of patient deaths in the reporting period.
Six were repeat offenders having these 'smoke alarms' sounding in the previous year's alert.
And some of these NHS organisations have been flagged as having elevated patient death levels for about five years.
The NHS England report is based on a calculation taking into account the number of deaths expected to be recorded in a Trust over a given period and the actual number.
This expected death toll is based on average annual figures as well as the characteristics—such as age—of the patients treated.
Patient deaths in the data include both those that die in hospital and fatalities that occur within 30 days of a patient being discharged.
County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust recorded about 26 per cent more deaths than expected in the NHS report, with 3,320 fatalities compared to 2,645 predicted. This was highest level of any trust in the country.
Site specific data for the trust recorded almost 30 per cent higher deaths than expected at the Trust's University Hospital of North Durham.
The Trust was one of those flagged by a MailOnline analysis last month as having an abnormal level of deaths for at least six consecutive months.
County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust was one of the six NHS trusts the report noted as also having an elevated number of patient deaths in the previous report for March 2023 to February 2024.
The other five were East Lancashire Hospitals NHS, Medway NHS Foundation Trust, East Cheshire NHS Trust, Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital and Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital has had an elevated level of patient deaths every month since March 2020, when Covid kicked off.
The two other trusts identified as having elevated patient deaths were University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust and University Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust.
In total, the NHS in England recorded 291,000 patient deaths in its report, a slight drop from the 292,000 recorded the report covering the equivalent period the year prior.
While the majority of trusts recorded higher—or an as expected—number of patient deaths, 11 had a lower than expected number.
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust in London recorded the largest gap with 28.5 per cent fewer deaths than precited—2,165 compared to 3,030.
This was followed by Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust with 27.3 per cent fewer deaths and Kingston and Richmond NHS Foundation Trust with 27.1 per cent fewer fatalities.
Patient deaths recorded in the report aren't necessarily avoidable and NHS England has said the data shouldn't be used to compare mortality outcomes between trusts.
The health service also states that higher than expected deaths is not evidence of poor care at a particular Trust, nor are lower than expected fatalities a sign of good quality care.
This system of recorded higher levels of patient deaths across NHS trusts is called summary hospital-level mortality indicator (SHMI).
It was created in the wake of the Mid-Staffs scandal in a bid to spot potentially worrying trends in patient deaths earlier so they can be investigated.
Up to 1,200 patients died as a result of poor care between January 2005 and March 2009 at Stafford hospital, run by the now-defunct Mid Staffordshire NHS Hospital Trust.
The horrors—blamed on cost cutting and poor decision-making—were uncovered through a similar data analysis.
On SHMI data an NHS spokesperson previously said: 'The findings from any analysis of the SHMI or its underlying data should act as a starting point for further investigation, rather than treated as a definitive view on quality of care.
'All hospital trusts need to examine, understand and explain their SHMI value, and use this information as a prompt to examine particular areas of patient care and take action if necessary.'
NHS England state the difference between the expected and observed fatalities cannot be interpreted as excess deaths.
Responding to the data, Dr Bernard Brett, Medical Director for the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, said: 'We have carried out a full and thorough review of our mortality data and we have seen an improvement in our SHMIs over the last year, which relates to more thorough data capture and improvements we have made in our care pathways for patients.
'There are a number of reasons for higher than expected SHMI scores and here in Norfolk we have an older population, many with significant long-term medical conditions, and a higher proportion of palliative care patients in our hospital.
'We have also identified important differences in how we capture and record data compared to other Trusts and there is an ongoing project to improve clinical data and coding quality and ensure that the complexity of the patients we look after is represented accurately in our data. We are working with our system partners to improve our palliative care pathways.
'Our Trust was one of the first in England to implement the Medical Examiner service and this team provides independent scrutiny of all deaths in the hospital. Whilst there are always opportunities to learn and improve, there are no indications from the Medical Examiner service that the Trust is an outlier for avoidable or unexpected deaths.
'The improvements we have made and continue to review are beginning to impact on the data we use for monitoring the number of patients who die following hospitalisation. This is something our Trust Board continues to closely monitor and is reported to regional and national colleagues.'
University Hospitals of North Midlands told MailOnline the Trust's SHMI increase was due to a coding issue with patient data and no clinical concerns had been identified. The Trust added that efforts were underway to improve the accuracy of its data.
The other six NHS trusts flagged in the report as having a higher than expected number of deaths were contacted for comment.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'My voice box was removed after the NHS missed my throat cancer'
'My voice box was removed after the NHS missed my throat cancer'

Sky News

time16 minutes ago

  • Sky News

'My voice box was removed after the NHS missed my throat cancer'

Steve Barton is angry, and he has every right to be. The 68-year-old retired engineer stares at his medical notes that, he says, expose in black and white the moment his life changed forever. "I have somehow missed… due to my mistake," a doctor writes in one of the notes, after it became apparent that Mr Barton had not been urgently referred to specialists over what later became an aggressive form of throat cancer. Steve now has a prosthetic voice box and is one of many British patients fighting medical negligence claims after being misdiagnosed. NHS officials in Scotland are dealing with thousands of cases annually. Meanwhile, Westminster's Public Affairs Committee (PAC) recently disclosed England's Department of Health and Social Care has set aside £58.2bn to settle clinical lawsuits arising before 2024. Mr Barton, who lives in Alloa near Stirling, repeatedly contacted his doctors after he began struggling with his breathing, speaking and swallowing. His concerns were recorded by the NHS as sinus issues. As panic grew and his voice became weaker, Mr Barton paid to see a private consultant who revealed the devastating news that a massive tumour had grown on his larynx and required part of his throat to be removed immediately. "I am angry, I am upset, I don't want anyone else to go through this," Mr Barton told Sky News. "There were at least four, possibly five, conversations on the phone. He [the doctor] said to me that it sounds like I've got reflux." 'He was palmed off' Mr Barton is now unable to work and cannot shower by himself because if water enters the hole in his neck, he could drown. And a windy day can cause a debilitating coughing fit if a gust catches his prosthetic voice box. Asked if he believes this was avoidable, Mr Barton replied: "Absolutely. 100%." His wife, Heather, told Sky News: "He hates this. You see him crying. It breaks my heart. It's been hard emotionally." She added: "Everybody knows their own body. He was palmed off and the consequence is a neck dissection. It [life] changed overnight." Legal battle over compensation The Barton family have been locked in a legal battle over their ordeal with the Medical and Dental Defence Union Scotland (MDDUS) - a body which indemnifies GPs. It has not admitted formal liability in this case but has agreed to settle financial compensation to Mr Barton. Izabela Wosiak, a solicitor from Irwin Mitchell who represents the Bartons, said: "Cases like Steve's are complex and usually quite difficult, but solicitors have accepted there was no defence to this case. "They have arranged to make an interim payment; however we are still in the process of negotiating final settlement." A MDDUS spokeswoman refused to comment while talks are being finalised. What is the scale of medical negligence in Britain? The NHS in Scotland is under the devolved control of the Scottish government. Figures suggest there were almost 14,000 clinical negligence claims and incidents in 2023/24, an increase on the previous year. It comes as PAC warned that the total liabilities in England's health service has hit £58.2bn. PAC chair Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown MP told Sky News: "I extend my sympathies to Steve and his family. Unfortunately, he is not alone. "Some are really heart-wrenching tales. Every single claim somebody is involved, someone has been in some way injured, so this is a terrible thing. "We are going to be working on how we can make the whole system less litigious and get compensation paid out quickly because if the state does harm to somebody, the least they could do is to compensate them as quickly as possible." Paul Whiteing, the chief executive of patient safety charity Action Against Medical Accidents, told Sky News: "The NHS itself last year [in England] paid out just over £5bn in compensational set aside money for compensation that it would need to pay out. "It's a huge cost and of course that doesn't speak to the cost to every individual, every family, every person who is impacted by the consequences of some form of medical accident and the trauma that can go with that."

Child with measles dies in UK as officials fear it's 'spreading like wildfire'
Child with measles dies in UK as officials fear it's 'spreading like wildfire'

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Child with measles dies in UK as officials fear it's 'spreading like wildfire'

This year there have been 529 confirmed measles cases, the majority, 357, were children under ten. But cases of measles are increasing in Britain because low vaccination rates leave children vulnerable A child has tragically died at a UK hospital after contracting measles, making them the second child to died following an acute measles infection in Britain this decade. The child, who has not been formerly identified, sadly died in Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool. While no details have been released about their medical treatment, it is understood that they were ill with measles and it is believed they also had other health problems. ‌ It is not known whether the child who died had been vaccinated, but the jab provides 97 per cent protection against getting ill. ‌ The number of children being treated at Alder Hey has public health officials worried that the virus could take hold and "spread like wildfire". It suggests Merseyside could be on the cusp of an outbreak, The Times reports. ‌ Measles is highly contagious and an infected person remains infectious for up to ten days. With Liverpool's low vaccine uptake, about 288 people in every 1,000 across the region are at risk. Professor Matt Ashton, director of public health for Liverpool, said: "I'm extremely worried that the potential is there for measles to really grab hold in our community. My concern is the unprotected population and it spreading like wildfire. That's why we're trying to be proactive. It's really important that people understand the seriousness of this." Bosses at NHS Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool have taken the unprecedented step of sending an open letter to parents after kids were left 'seriously unwell' with measles infections. The letter says the reason there has been more cases of measles in children and young people is because fewer people are having the MMR vaccine, which protects against measles as well as two other viruses called mumps and rubella. ‌ What are the symptoms of measles? Measles usually starts with cold-like symptoms, followed by a rash a few days later. Some people may also get small spots in their mouth. The first symptoms include a runny or blocked nose, a high temperature, a cough, sneezing, and red, sore, watery eyes. A rash usually appears a few days later, starting on the face and behind the ears before spreading to the rest of the body. Spots of the rash are sometimes raised and joined together to form blotchy patches, and they're not normally itchy. The rash looks brown or red on white skin and may be harder to see on brown or black skin, NHS guidance states, adding: "It's very unlikely to be measles if you've had both doses of the MMR vaccine or you've had measles before." ‌ What you should do if you think you have measles You should contact 111 or ask for an urgent GP appointment if you think you or your child may have measles, if your child is under one year old and has come into contact with someone who has measles, or if you've been in close contact with someone who has measles and are pregnant or have a weakened immune system. You should also seek urgent medical advice if you or your child have a high temperature that has not come down after taking paracetamol or ibuprofen; you or your child have difficulty breathing – you may feel more short of breath than usual; your baby or young child is not feeding well, or taking less feeds or fluids than usual; you or your child are peeing less than usual (or your baby has fewer wet nappies); you or your child feels very unwell, or you're worried something is seriously wrong. Anyone with measles should stay off work, school or nursery for at least four days from when the rash first appears, and try to avoid close contact with babies and anyone who is pregnant or has a weakened immune system. Children are vaccinated after their first birthday and then again at 18 months. Anyone can request a jab if they missed out as a child.

NHS doctors' strike: Health secretary and BMA to meet next week
NHS doctors' strike: Health secretary and BMA to meet next week

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

NHS doctors' strike: Health secretary and BMA to meet next week

Talks between Health Secretary Wes Streeting and the British Medical Association (BMA) will take place next week in a bid to avert strike action in England's NHS, the BBC doctors, previously known as junior doctors, announced earlier this week that they will walk out for five consecutive days from 25 July until 30 July over a dispute about pay with the BMA said strikes would only be called off if next week's talks produce an offer it can put to its government has insisted it cannot improve its offer of a 5.4% increase for this year. Resident doctors were awarded a 5.4% pay rise for this financial year - which will go into pay packets from August - following a 22% increase over the previous two they are arguing that pay in real terms is still around 20% lower than it was in 2008 and have called for the government to set out a pathway to restoring its believe that this year's 5.4% increase doesn't take them far enough down that department sources have told the BBC the health secretary is sympathetic to improving working conditions for resident doctors, but he won't budge on the BMA's strike announcement, Streeting called the strike "unnecessary and unreasonable", adding: "The NHS is hanging by a thread - why on earth are they threatening to pull it?"He said the government was "ready and willing" to work with the BMA, but any further strike action would be a disaster for patients and push back the progress made in reducing waiting lists in resident doctor committee co-chairs, Dr Melissa Ryan and Dr Ross Nieuwoudt, said on Wednesday they had been left with "no choice" but to strike without a "credible offer to keep us on the path to restore our pay".Lord Robert Winston, a professor and TV doctor who was a pioneer of IVF treatment, resigned from the BMA on Friday over the planned an interview with The Times, he urged against strike action and said it could damage people's trust in the doctors took part in 11 separate strikes during 2023 and order to end the previous strikes last year the incoming Labour government awarded a backdated increase worth 22% over two action in England will not affect resident doctors in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland, who negotiate directly with their devolved governments on doctors' basic salaries in England range from £37,000 to £70,000 a year for a 40-hour week, depending on experience, with extra payments for working nightshifts and does not include the latest 5.4% average pay award for this year which will start to be paid into wage packets from August.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store