Tuesday 26 January 2016

The '111' emergency service fails again.

For the last few years I've highlighted the catastrophe of the closure of the highly effective 'NHS Direct' phone line created by the 2002 Labour government.

The Conservative Liberal alliance closed it down and replaced it with the 111 service which is staffed by people who have no medical qualification.

There have been many examples of failure to spot serious conditions - this is just the latest. This inquest report makes it clear once again that 111 needs Nurses and Doctors available for patients; 


William Mead's 'fate was sealed' after NHS 111 call handlers failed to identify his deadly illness, says mother

The report called into question the NHS non-emergency helpline’s ability to identify deadly illnesses
Kate Ng  
The Independent


The mother of a one-year-old baby who died of sepsis said his "fate was sealed" after NHS 111 call handlers failed to identify his deadly illness. Melissa Mead, mother of William Mead, told BBC Radio 4: “When I dialled 111… we were told William’s condition was non-urgent and didn’t require any emergency treatment, and that we would get a call-back within six hours.

“But when the doctor called back after three hours, I think William’s fate was sealed. He died within 12 hours of that phone call. We found him just after 8 in the morning… he had been passed away for a little while [already].”

Her interview follows an NHS England report into William’s death in 2014, which found there were 16 missed chances to save his life.
The report, seen by the Daily Mail and the BBC, said he might still be alive today if NHS 111 call handlers had realised he was in a life-threatening situation.

The NHS 111 non-emergency helpline’s ability to identify deadly illnesses in children and babies has been called into question.
NHS 111 call handlers are not medically trained. The report suggested that if a doctor had taken the call instead of 111 staff, they would have most likely recognised the need for "urgent medical attention".

The report detailed the opportunities missed to save William’s life.

Out of 16 missed chances, the five main windows were:
 

William’s GP had not recorded all the relevant information in his notes
 

The severity of William’s symptoms had not been recognised
 

Inadequate advice was given to William’s parents about what to do if his condition worsened
 

The out-of-hours GP service had no access to the baby’s primary care records

 

The pathway tool used by NHS 111 call handlers was not sensitive enough to pick up “red-flag” warnings of sepsis

It also included failure by GPs, who saw William six times in the months prior to his death, to spot pneumonia which could have prevented his circumstances.

The report said: “Had any of these different courses of action been taken, William could probably have survived.”

Recommendations made by the report included training call advisors to spot when there is a need to probe further into the condition of the patient, and when to escalate cases.

It also called for better recognition of the signs and symptoms of septicaemia by GPs.

The report is the result of a year-long campaign by William’s parents, Paul and Melissa, to find out what really happened to cause their son’s death.

Director of nursing with NHS England in the south west, Lindsey Scott, told the BBC: “One of the significant learning points for us is how difficult it is for both professionals and parents to diagnose septicaemia.


“Everyone involved in this report is determined to make sure lessons are learned from William’s death, so other families don’t have to do through the same trauma.

“None of this detracts from our profound regret at the loss of William. For that loss, on behalf of all NHS organisations involved, I would like to apologise publicly to Mr and Mrs Mead,” she told BBC.

Neil Harris
(a don't stop till you drop production)

Home: helpmesortoutthenhs.blogspot.com
Contact me: neilwithpromisestokeep@gmail.com

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