
Chris Packham backs call for delayed report into autistic deaths to be published
He is among campaigners who have written to Health Secretary Wes Streeting to say the country is 'standing by year after year while vulnerable people die'.
The latest Learning from lives and deaths report (LeDeR) – expected to show data for 2023 – was due to be published around November last year but it is understood it has been held up over 'practical data issues'.
The LeDeR programme was established in 2015 in an effort to review the deaths of people with a learning disability and autistic people in England.
Annual reports are aimed at summarising their lives and deaths with the aim of learning from what happened, improving care, reducing health inequalities and preventing people with a learning disability and autistic people from early deaths.
In the letter to Mr Streeting, signed by various groups including charities Autism Action and Mencap as well as bereaved families, the delay to the latest report was branded 'unacceptable'.
They said: 'It took at least 17 years for the Government to establish this vital initiative after the 1998 finding that people with learning disabilities were 58 times more likely to die before the age of 50 than the general population.
'Although it was established to 'get to the bottom of why people with learning disabilities typically die much earlier than average, and to inform a strategy to reduce this inequality,' 10 years later – too many people are still dying premature, preventable deaths.
'In response, the Government is showing a shocking lack of urgency and has let the only discernible tool to understand and act on these deaths be caught up in delay and bureaucracy.'
The most recent report, which showed data for 2022, confirmed care and outcomes for people with learning disabilities are still often below acceptable standards compared with the general population.
Of the 2,054 adults with a learning disability who died that year and had a completed recorded underlying cause of death, 853 (42%) had deaths classified as avoidable.
This was down on the 2021 figure of 50% of avoidable deaths among adults with a learning disability, but was 'significantly higher' than the percentage for the general population across Great Britain, which was 22.8% in 2020 – the latest data available at that time.
Last month, the parents of an autistic teenager who died after being prescribed medication against his and his parents' wishes hailed the publication of guidance they hope will safeguard others as a 'significant milestone'.
A report in 2020 found 18-year-old Oliver McGowan's death four years earlier at Southmead Hospital in Bristol was 'potentially avoidable'.
He died in 2016 after being given the antipsychotic Olanzapine and contracting neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) – a rare side-effect of the drug.
An independent review later found that the fit and healthy teenager's death was 'potentially avoidable' and his parents, Paula and Tom McGowan, said their son died 'as a result of the combined ignorance and arrogance of doctors' who treated him.
In June, his parents – who have campaigned since his death for improvements in the system – welcomed the publication of new guidance aimed at ensuring safer, more personalised care for people with a learning disability and autistic people.
Learning disability charity Mencap described the delay to the latest LeDeR report as 'disappointing and worrying', and said the Government must 'not shy away from the uncomfortable truth that for many years the healthcare system has failed people who are already marginalised in so many ways'.
Autism Action chief executive Tom Purser accused the Government of 'systemically devaluing the lives of autistic people and those with learning disabilities' by delaying the long-awaited annual report and giving campaigners and families 'empty reassurances'.
He added: 'There must be systemic changes in the way this information is collected, recorded, shared and acted upon – and it needs to be accountable and written into law. We are calling on this data to be published annually and independently of the Government and the NHS.
'Without these changes the Government has nothing to learn from and more vulnerable lives are at stake.'
A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: 'We inherited a situation where the care of people with a learning disability and autistic people was not good enough and we recently published a code of practice on training to make sure staff have the right knowledge and skills to provide safe and informed care.
'We are committed to improving care for people with a learning disability and autistic people. The Learning from Lives and Deaths report will help identify key improvements needed to tackle health disparities and prevent avoidable deaths.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Almost one million NHS ‘free passes' handed out to asylum seekers
ALMOST one million NHS 'free passes' have been handed to asylum seekers in five years, stats reveal. Some 920,199 HC2 certificates — granting free prescriptions, dental care, eye tests, wigs and travel to appointments — were issued. That is 59 per cent of all HC2 forms dished out from 2019 to 2024, despite asylum seekers making up less than one per cent of the population. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'No wonder illegal immigrants from across Europe are flocking here.' The certificates include up to £233 for specs and unlimited dental work. Anyone can apply if they have little or no income. Asylum seekers automatically receive one if they qualify for Section 95 support, which covers housing and financial help. An NHS spokesman said: 'The NHS is legally required to provide healthcare services to asylum seekers, including access to help with health costs through the NHS Low Income Scheme.' A Government spokesman said most were issued 'under the previous administration'. The figures were uncovered via a Freedom of Information request to the NHS Business Services Authority. 25K migrants have arrived across the Channel so far this year despite Labour's promise to crackdown 1


Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
GP doctors' surgeries are changing and carried out 7million more appointments
GP practices have delivered a third more appointments than before the coronavirus pandemic - but trouble may be brewing with family doctors threatening strike action GP practices have carried out seven million more appointments last year according to new NHS data. Practices delivered 31.4 million appointments in June which is up 32% on the same month pre-pandemic. GP surgeries host more non-doctor staff like physiotherapists who now carry out more appointments, while around a third are not face-to-face. There were 383.3 million appointments in the last 12 months, compared to 375.7 million in the previous year. It comes as the British Medical Association says its GPs members could strike unless they can help run new 'community hub' health centres being set up across the country in a major reform. Amanda Doyle, NHS England National Director for Primary Care and Community Services, said: 'General practice teams have been working exceptionally hard to boost access and turn our services around, with today's data showing important progress as over 7 million additional appointments were delivered in the past year. 'While services improve and patient satisfaction has started to rise, we know more needs to be done to improve access, which is why we remain committed to working with the government on delivering the 10-year plan to boost access and improve primary care services for patients.' The Government's Ten Year Health Plan will establish 300 new 'neighbourhood health centres' across England to help keep people out of hospitals. They will offer scans, checkups, straightforward treatment, and broader life help. They will include doctors, nurses, dentists, pharmacists, counsellors, physios, health visitors, weight-loss specialists and even job advisers - but so far little guidance has been issued on who will run them. GPs want to lead new centres and are said to be 'alarmed' by hospital leaders' attempts to make themselves central to the plans. The BMA has written to Health Secretary Wes Streeting and health minister Stephen Kinnock setting out six demands on pay, contract funding and how much extra money they will get to work in and run the hubs. The BMA wants its demands met by mid-September to avert a strike among family doctors. Office for National Statistics polling in England shows 72% of people found contacting their GP practice easy, which was up from 60% less than a year ago in September 2024. Some 73% of patients rated their overall GP experience as good compared with 67% last year. The latest GP Patient Survey also shows 53% found it easy to contact their practice by phone, up from 50%, while 49% found the NHS app easy to use which is almost double the 25% figure from the previous year. The Government announced last week that an extra 2,000 GPs have been recruited through the Additional Roles Reimbursement Scheme (ARRS). Health Minister, Ashley Dalton, said: 'Through our 10 Year Health Plan we are shifting care from hospitals to community. Our Plan for Change will deliver Neighbourhood Health Services that will put GPs at the heart of delivering more personalised, proactive care in local areas when it is more convenient for patients. We are on a mission to rebuild our health service and give people better access to care when they need it." Dennis Reed, director of Silver Voices, which campaigns for elderly Brits, said: "Any improvement in access to GPs is welcome but it is far too early to be blowing trumpets. On the ground it is still frustratingly difficult for patients to see an actual GP. "I suspect that many of these increased appointments are with other practice staff, where patients are often diverted for an initial diagnosis. GPs are still an elusive species in many parts of the country. And to celebrate the fact that less than half of patients find the NHS app easy to use is weird. Many older patients are unable to use the app at all because they do not have a smartphone or are unable to manipulate small screens."

The National
7 hours ago
- The National
Wes Streeting office vandalised with windows smashed
A trans rights group – who call themselves Bash Back – has taken credit and shared a series of images to social media site BlueSky this afternoon which show the front of the Health Secretary's office. Spraypainted on one window are the words "child killer" while several other windows appear to also be smashed. The post (below) reads: 'We refuse to sit and watch as trans young people have their healthcare stripped from them. We refuse to allow Streeting to cover up their suicides. We refuse to endure the violence and humiliation. They will have to go through us.' Our statement on the actions at Wes Streeting's office last night. We refuse to sit and watch as trans young people have their healthcare stripped from them. We refuse to allow Streeting to cover up their suicides. We refuse to endure the violence and humiliation. They will have to go through us. [image or embed] — BASH BACK (@ 1 August 2025 at 13:39 A statement was also released which said it was in response to his "continued abuse of trans people in the medical system, and attempts to cover up the suicides of trans young people under his watch as Health Secretary". Streeting, meanwhile, condemned the vandalism and said it was "unfair" to his staff and an "attack on democracy". The NHS announced in March last year that children would no longer be prescribed puberty blockers at gender identity clinics. In May, following the publication of the Cass Review, the Conservative government introduced a ban with emergency legislation, preventing the prescription of the medication from European or private prescribers and restricting NHS provision to within clinical trials. The move was then made indefinite in December under the new Labour Government – with Streeting as Health Secretary. He said in April this year that he is 'genuinely sorry' for the 'fear and anxiety' felt by the transgender community following the ban. But he added: 'I would challenge anyone in my shoes to say, as a politician, that you would overrule clinical advice, especially when it comes to medicines that are challenged on the basis of whether they are safe or not for children. 'I know people disagree with that decision. I know it's caused real fear and anxiety in our community, and that certainly doesn't sit easy with me.' Commenting on the vandalism, Streeting said: "From day one as Ilford North's MP I've had an accessible and visible constituency office to serve my local community. "Repeated criminal damage is unfair to my staff and an attack on democracy.I will not be commenting further while there is a live police investigation." The Met Police have been approached for comment. The full statement from Bash Back reads: "On July 31st, a group of activists representing BASH BACK took action against Wes Streeting's office in Ilford, in response to his continued abuse of trans people in the medical system, and attempts to cover up the suicides of trans young people under his watch as Health Secretary. "In the months since the puberty blockers ban, we have seen huge backpedals in the healthcare rights afforded to trans people and young people especially - in an NHS system that was never kind to us in the first place. "Under Streeting's rule, GPs have been banned from conducting blood tests on trans patients accessing HRT, and trans people have been banned from accessing hospital wards that fit their gender, leading necessarily to poorer quality of care across the board. "Streeting, along with NHS England, the EHRC, and Hilary Cass, have paved the way for state-mandated conversion therapy, which has since led to the Department for Education's proposed introduction of a Section 28 style bill, preventing discussion of transness in the classroom. "It is clear now that Wes Streeting and the Labour government intend to erase trans people from public life, and will go out of their way to do so, no matter how many bodies lay in their path."