This piece from ‘The Independent’ highlights the problems
that are bubbling up from government policy to force hospitals to use private
healthcare providers.
Then again for the Tories it’s been a success; it’s started
the process of stealing the NHS from us and it’s made a lot of profits for
their business friends and sponsors;
Dozens of
NHS patients have been left with damage to their eyes, including partial loss
of sight, after undergoing routine cataract operations which had been
outsourced to a private provider.
A hospital
in Somerset is now facing a slew of legal claims from patients who say they
were left with problems including blurred vision, pain and swelling after
undergoing cataract removal operations at a unit run by Vanguard Healthcare,
which operated on the hospital site.
The scandal
will raise serious questions about the Coalition Government’s plans to expand
the role of private providers working in the NHS.
Vanguard
had been under contract to Musgrove Park Hospital, in Taunton, since May to
help clear a backlog of patients. Of 62 people who underwent cataract
operations, 31 reported poor outcomes, according to lawyers for the patients.
Cataract operations usually have a very low complication rate, typically around
in one 400.
Laurence
Vick, head of clinical negligence at Michelmores Solicitors, which is acting
for a number of the patients affected, said the case “uncovered the uneasy
relationship between the NHS and the private sector”.
“We don’t
know what arrangements are in place for Musgrove to recoup their outlay and
losses on this contract from Vanguard,” he said. “From the taxpayer’s point of
view, it would be totally unreasonable for Vanguard to walk away from this
scandal with only their reputation, and not their [investment], damaged… It is
crucial that an episode of this kind is not dismissed as an anomaly – a
hybridised, public-private NHS will need to be wary of similar issues in
future.”
Patients
affected are now having their side-effects treated at the hospital itself.
Lawyers for some of the patients, most of whom were elderly and vulnerable,
said it was likely the NHS Trust would have to pay for any successful
compensation claims – meaning that the taxpayer would be footing the bill.
Among those
affected was an 84-year-old man, whose son, Chris Newcombe, is now calling for
an independent inquiry. Mr Newcombe says his father experienced blurred vision
and swollen corneas after being operated on at the Vanguard mobile surgery
unit.
Mr Newcombe
told the Somerset County Gazette: “My father is traumatised and depressed with
the loss of his eyesight. Previous pleasures of gardening and watching sport on
the TV have now been taken away from him. This could have been prevented if the
welfare of the patients had been thought about, rather than this urgency of
just getting people through.”
His parents
had “only praise and admiration” for staff at Musgrove’s own ophthalmology
department, who have since been treating his father, he said.
The Trust
said that due to an ongoing investigation into the matter, they could not
comment “in detail on the sequence of events surrounding the unfortunate
complications experienced by our patients receiving cataract surgery with
Vanguard Healthcare in their mobile theatre at Musgrove Park Hospital. Our
first and foremost concern has always been our patients, and particularly those
who have experienced complications,” the statement said. “We have been in very
close contact with them since the incident to ensure they are fully informed
with our progress and receive the highest quality aftercare and treatment.”
Chief
executive Jo Cubbon said that “early into the arrangement” with Vanguard in
May, “technical issues in the facility had arisen and it became necessary to
cease the service arrangements in place”.
Ian
Gillespie, chief executive of Vanguard Healthcare, said: “Patient care is our
number one priority and we’re working closely with the Trust to understand and
fully investigate the root causes of any complications… Operations were carried
out in Vanguard’s operating theatre by highly qualified surgeons, approved by
the hospital.”
The
Department for Health was yet to respond last night.
Profile:
Vanguard
Founded in
2002 and headquartered in Brockworth, Gloucester, Vanguard’s key service is the
hire of mobile operating theatres, dedicated mobile endoscopy units, wards, and
clinics to public and private hospitals. The company’s latest accounts show a
£576,000 profit on sales of £11.3m in 2013, a rise of more than 10 per cent.
Its 57 staff – 35 technical and 22 administrative – earned an average of almost
£53,000.
Vanguard
Executive Chairman and co-founder Andrew Allen, a chartered accountant, spent
the past 20 years as owner/manager of healthcare businesses. According to
Vanguard’s website “three of these businesses were backed by private equity,
and realised returns upon exit well in excess of 30 per cent p.a. for
investors”.
Neil Harris
(a don’t stop till you drop production)
Home: helpmesortoutstpeters.blogspot.comContact me: neilwithpromisestokeep@gmail.com
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