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115 dead from NHS mistakes and accidents; Concern at 'disturbing' six-month figure.


Byline: TOM BODDEN

MORE than 100 patients died in the NHS NHS
abbr.
National Health Service


NHS (in Britain) National Health Service
 in Wales in six months due to clinical errors or safety incidents, a report said yesterday.

The National Patient Safety Agency said there were 26,949 'incidents' reported between October-March, an increase of 9% on the previous six months.

Overall, 68% were reported as causing no harm, 22% as low harm, 8% as moderate harm, 1.4% severe harm, and 0.4% death.

A total of 368 incidents resulted in severe harm and 115 contributed to deaths.

Most common types of incident were patient accidents (36%), access, admission, transfer and discharge (10%) and treatment or procedure (9%).

A patient safety incident is any unintended or unexpected incident leading to harm for patients. It covers adverse events and clinical errors.

The agency works with doctors, nurses, pharmacists and safety experts to identify problems which may need action across the NHS.

In the past six months this included new guidance on oxygen safety, the clinical use of catheters, and how delayed appointments could lead to blindness among patients with glaucoma glaucoma (glôkō`mə), ocular disorder characterized by pressure within the eyeball caused by an excessive amount of aqueous humor (the fluid substance filling the eyeball). .

Chief executive Martin Fletcher Martin Fletcher (born 7/7 1956) was the Foreign News Editor of The Times, a British newspaper. Previously Washington Bureau Chief, Belfast correspondent, and European correspondent based in Brussels, Fletcher took over the foreign pages of the paper in 2002.  said: "More reports do not mean more risks to patients. Indeed quite the reverse. This data is sound evidence of an improving reporting culture across the NHS."

Chief Medical Officer for Wales Dr Tony Jewell Tony 'TJ' Jewell is a former Australian rules football player who played in the VFL between 1964 and 1970 for the Richmond Football Club. He was senior coach of Richmond from 1979 to 1981 and then again from 1986 to 1987. He was also senior coach of St Kilda in 1983.  said: "Every year, thousands of patients receive high quality, safe and effective treatment, but in a modern health system - where increasingly complicated procedures are being undertaken - mistakes can and will still happen.

"It is important that every incident is reported so we can learn from these errors."

Welsh Lib Dem LIB DEM Liberal Democrat(s) (UK political party)  health spokesperson Peter Black said: "It's very worrying that since the end of 2008 we've seen a sharp rise in the number of incidents reported in the NHS in Wales.

"Prior to the end of 2008, the figure had been coming down.

"What is even more disturbing is the high number of patients dying."

tombodden@dailypost.co.uk

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Chief Medical Officer for Wales Dr Tony Jewell
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Publication:Daily Post (Liverpool, England)
Date:Oct 8, 2009
Words:336
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