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NHS has ‘culture of cover-up' over failures, Health Secretary says

NHS has ‘culture of cover-up' over failures, Health Secretary says

Independent17-06-2025
Health Secretary Wes Streeting said the NHS has a 'culture of cover-up' as he apologised for failures that are said to have left a woman permanently disabled.
He told MPs there is 'too much of that happening' in the NHS, and that reputations are protected instead of patients being told the truth.
The minister's comments came after Labour MP Perran Moon (Camborne and Redruth) told him about the experience of a woman in his constituency who suffered from nerve damage after a hip operation, but was told her pain was 'common'.
Mr Moon said: 'A couple of weeks ago at my constituency surgery, through the tears, my constituent Amy explained how, following a hip operation in 2008, she suffered progressive nerve damage due to repeated failures in diagnosis, referral and treatment.
'Despite raising concerns for years, she was told her pain was common.
'A nerve test in 2015 confirmed damage and further tests last year showed a significant deterioration. After 17 years, she's only now been offered surgery.
'All Amy wants to know is what steps are being taken to ensure that no other patient is left permanently disabled due to such long and systemic failures.'
Responding, Mr Streeting said: 'Can I first of all, on behalf of the NHS, apologise to his constituent.
'That is a totally intolerable situation, but sadly not rare or exceptional.
'There's too much of that happening and a culture of cover-up and covering reputations, rather than being honest with patients about failures.
'We are changing the culture, safety is at the heart of the 10-year plan, and I'd be delighted to talk to him further about his constituent's case.'
Elsewhere during health and social care oral questions on Tuesday, the Government was challenged on the difficulties that pharmacies are facing.
Liberal Democrat MP Caroline Voaden (South Devon) told MPs the 'current funding model doesn't take into account the lower footfall and the limited referral rates that are common in rural areas'.
She said: 'If a pharmacy in a small market town closes, it can cause extreme difficulties for people to access advice and medicines, particularly where there is little or no public transport and they have to go a long way.'
Conservative shadow health minister Dr Luke Evans raised the cap on funded consultation appointments that pharmacies can schedule through the Pharmacy First Scheme.
He said: 'Once they hit that cap, they are no longer paid the £17 per consultation.
'That, in turn, may mean patients will either be turned away or the pharmacist has to take the hit and has to pay for it themselves.'
Care minister Stephen Kinnock replied: 'The pharmacy sector is facing huge challenges after massive cuts over the last 14 years. We're beginning to rebuild, but there are particular challenges for rural pharmacies.
'We are looking at comprehensive reform in the pharmacy sector around better use of technology, hub-and-spoke dispensing and a range of other options which would enable better remote dispensing for rural pharmacies.'
He told Dr Evans that the 'record uplift' of £3.1 billion for the pharmacy sector was coming in 'after years of underfunding, incompetence and neglect' from the Conservatives, and that the allocation of funding will be looked at in their reforms.
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Terrified mum shares the chilling nursery snap of her toddler that saved his life – but can you spot the hidden killer?
Terrified mum shares the chilling nursery snap of her toddler that saved his life – but can you spot the hidden killer?

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  • The Sun

Terrified mum shares the chilling nursery snap of her toddler that saved his life – but can you spot the hidden killer?

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But when Sidney's nursery took a snap of him as he enjoyed a day in the sensory room, the camera flash revealed his left eye was cloudy compared to his right. "It was almost like it was reflecting the light, it's really hard to describe. It was like his eye wasn't there, it was like a mirror," Laura said. After a visit to her GP and Specsavers, Sidney was eventually referred to Birmingham Children's Hospital and had an ultrasound. He was diagnosed with retinoblastoma, a cancer which starts in the retina, the inner layer in the back of the eye, on May 19. Doctors diagnose around 40 to 50 children with retinoblastoma in the UK every year, according to Cancer Research UK. Almost 99 to 100 out of every 100 children diagnosed survive for five years or more after they are diagnosed. "It was horrendous," the mum said. "We were so worried." Docs decided the best course of action would be to remove the eye and brave Sidney underwent the op on 27 May. Initially this really concerned Laura. 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Streeting: Half my colleagues use weight-loss jabs
Streeting: Half my colleagues use weight-loss jabs

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  • Telegraph

Streeting: Half my colleagues use weight-loss jabs

Wes Streeting has revealed that 'half my colleagues' are on weight-loss jabs. The Health Secretary said the slimming drugs were 'the talk of the House of Commons' as he pledged to widen access. Robert Jenrick and Nadine Dorries are among the politicians who have admitted taking weight-loss jabs. The drugs, which include Wegovy and Mounjaro, were originally designed to treat Type 2 diabetes but are now in widespread use by those looking to lose weight. Speaking on LBC, Mr Streeting said: 'Weight-loss jabs are the talk of the House of Commons. Half my colleagues are on them and are judging the rest of us, saying 'You lot should be on them'.' Mr Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, admitted to taking Ozempic last year but said he stopped after 'a short period of time'. He said: 'To be honest, I was overweight. I took Ozempic for a short period of time, didn't particularly enjoy it, but it was helpful. 'Since then I've just lost weight in the normal way by eating less, eating more healthily, doing some exercise – going to the gym, going running.' Ms Dorries wrote in the Daily Mail that taking the weight-loss jabs had given her the confidence to wear bikinis this summer. She said: 'My overall health is massively improved; my blood tests are all normal, the pain in my left hip has disappeared and the aches and niggles are now just what you would expect for a woman of my age. 'So, am I beach ready? Am I looking forward to my first post-Mounjaro summer holiday? In short, yes!' Mr Streeting told the media on Thursday morning: 'The thing is, if you can afford these weight-loss jabs, which can be over 200 quid a month, well, that's all right for you. 'But most people in this country haven't got a spare two-and-a-half grand a year, and often the people who have the worst and most challenging obesity also have the lowest income. 'So I'm bringing to weight-loss jabs the principle of fairness which has underpinned the NHS.' He added: 'It should be available based on need and not the ability to pay. And that's what we're going to do on weight-loss jabs, as well as a number of other things, including people getting more fit, more active, supporting people on diet and nutrition... that's the bit of the weight-loss jab debate that sometimes gets lost. 'It's not that you can have some weight-loss jabs and stuff your face with Jaffa cakes...' He said obesity costs the NHS billions a year, adding that taxes have been going 'up and up' to pay for the health service.

Young mother-of-two shares one piece of misinformation everyone needs to know about killer disease - after 'piles' turned out to be stage 3 bowel cancer
Young mother-of-two shares one piece of misinformation everyone needs to know about killer disease - after 'piles' turned out to be stage 3 bowel cancer

Daily Mail​

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Young mother-of-two shares one piece of misinformation everyone needs to know about killer disease - after 'piles' turned out to be stage 3 bowel cancer

Busy working mother Jenna Borthwick could always find a reasonable explanation for feeling under the weather; she was tired, it was her period, it was just another flu from nursery. But in reality, she was one of the thousands of young Britons unaware that they are living with deadly bowel cancer. The 31-year-old, from the Scottish Borders, posting on TikTok, revealed the one bit of crucial 'misinformation' that might be stopping people from taking their symptoms seriously. In a series of images titled 'symptoms that led to my bowel cancer diagnosis in March 2025', she goes into greater detail about how it was discovered that she had an advanced stage of the disease. She wrote: 'So many people asking what my symptoms were: some of these like the tiredness/cramps/and catching colds could be traced back quite a few months but it's so easy to pin these down to something else. 'Busy working mum? Of course I'm tired. Cramps? Must be getting my period! Why am I catching every single cold/ flu going around? Must be my toddlers coming home from nursery!' She continued that it was only a few months before her formal diagnosis that more physical symptoms began to ramp up, and she thanks her doctor for taking her concerns seriously and agreeing that 'there was something not quite right'. Summarising how she was 'constantly ill in the lead up to my diagnosis', Ms Borthwick said that she needed the toilet every time she ate, had blood in her faeces, had abdominal cramps, and felt like she needed to empty her bowels constantly. 'The other symptoms only started two/three months prior to my diagnosis and I actually went to my GP quite quickly,' she added. 'I was super lucky that she ran tests quite early on and she knew there was something not quite right. 'We did however think it was piles to start with, and then inflammatory bowel disease as I think the symptoms are very similar.' 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In this demographic diagnoses had risen by up to 23 per cent in people aged 20 to 49. Researchers are still trying to explore factors being the rise in early onset cancers, with some suggesting modern diets, exposures to microplastics, or a combination of several triggers could be to blame.

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