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12:56pm Thursday 29th July 2010 in
Standards of care at a leading hospital in Oxford where four babies died were "not what was expected", a health boss said.
A major report on children's heart surgery at John Radcliffe Hospital said the paediatric heart surgery unit should remain suspended until arrangements are made for improving care.
Four babies were all treated by the same surgeon and died within three months at the hospital.
Their deaths, between last December and February, prompted the temporary closure of the unit in March and the launch of an investigation by the NHS South Central strategic health authority (SHA).
Its chairman, Dr Geoffrey Harris, apologised to the families of those babies who died.
"We offer our sincere condolences and we apologise that, in the cases, the standards of care were not what was expected," he said.
Surgeon Caner Salih, who operated on the four babies, is said to have complained about the age of equipment and poor working practices at the paediatric care unit, asking for operations to cease.
The report does not criticise his care.
Comments(9)
MariaC
says...
7:08pm Thu 29 Jul 10
Apu Nahasapeemapetilon
says...
7:26pm Thu 29 Jul 10
MariaC wrote:Pesonally I would jump on a plane to Newcastle with my kid for the operation, if it meant he was going to live.
It truly is bad news for Oxford. My son is due to have a heart operation soon and he was set to go to Oxford now it would appear that me and my husband will have to get him comfortable going to another hospital when he finally has his operation. The staff at the JR Cardiac Unit are amazing in all that they do and it is hard to believe that we could lose a world renowed surgeon in Professor Westaby. However, as a parent with a child with a heart condition I will continue to fight to keep the Oxford Children Cardiac Surgery Unit and even though, at present, it is not able to perform operations, i would hope that in the future it will be the beacon of light that it should be.
Lord Palmerstone
says...
9:50pm Thu 29 Jul 10
online_reader
says...
9:15am Fri 30 Jul 10
Lord Palmerstone wrote:Because with improved working practice they might have done better. It does criticise the lack of supervision, but it falls short of blaming the deaths on that since the infants were so vulnerable it's impossible to know whether they'd have survived. Still, to the mothers it matters. A lot.
"The report does not criticise his care"
Nor according to the Guardian on Air (BBC) does it criticise anything else. "The boys done good". So why bother with an enquiry?
Lord Palmerstone
says...
9:36am Fri 30 Jul 10
john_crocker
says...
10:12am Fri 30 Jul 10
Apu Nahasapeemapetilon wrote:If you read the report, clinical care was not criticised at the unit. The surgeons in question were not criticised. It was the practices and procedures put in place by management that was criticised and it is these practices that the trust and the report acknowledge have to change. May I remind you Oxford has access to a world renown Heart Surgeon, Research Facilities plus two Universitys with an excellent reputation, the NHS does not deserve to loose this knowledge. I do agree things need to change but I dont agree with the removal of the unit.
MariaC wrote: It truly is bad news for Oxford. My son is due to have a heart operation soon and he was set to go to Oxford now it would appear that me and my husband will have to get him comfortable going to another hospital when he finally has his operation. The staff at the JR Cardiac Unit are amazing in all that they do and it is hard to believe that we could lose a world renowed surgeon in Professor Westaby. However, as a parent with a child with a heart condition I will continue to fight to keep the Oxford Children Cardiac Surgery Unit and even though, at present, it is not able to perform operations, i would hope that in the future it will be the beacon of light that it should be.Pesonally I would jump on a plane to Newcastle with my kid for the operation, if it meant he was going to live.
online_reader
says...
11:50am Fri 30 Jul 10
Lord Palmerstone wrote:Probably just to decide what new equipment / procedures to use; but I agree it's likely to be expensive and the money could probably be better spent on that new equipment. I understand it's all moot anyhow until a national review is completed of all child heart surgery units; they're planning on funding fewer but larger ones, and Oxford may not be on the list anyway. No point buying new equipment if it isn't going to be used.
Yes online, I picked up, I think, that the issue was the statistical significance of a very small sample. The conclusion seemed unsurprisingly to be that it was not possible to extrapolate from these results to any conclusion. To be fair, if any of the mums had been statisticians they would have known this already and if they aren't it would only tend to distress and frustrate them further. I repeat :to what benefit this enquiry?
PK Nuts
says...
4:22pm Fri 30 Jul 10
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The New Realist says...
4:22pm Thu 29 Jul 10