Lucy Letby: doctor who raised alarm calls for regulation of NHS executives | NHS


NHS executives should be regulated similarly to medical practitioners, the paediatrician who first raised the alarm on Lucy Letby has said, after clinicians’ concerns about her were “turned on the head”.

The behaviour and accountability of senior officials within the health service “absolutely” needed to be regulated, said Dr Stephen Brearey, who first carried out an urgent review into the nurse sentenced on Monday to a whole-life term for the “sadistic” murders of seven babies.

“Doctors and nurses all have the regulatory bodies that we have to answer to and quite often we’ll see senior managers who have no apparent accountability for what they do in our trusts and then move to other trusts,” Brearey told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“You worry about their future actions and there doesn’t seem to be any system to make them accountable.”

Dr Stephen Brearey
Dr Stephen Brearey, who tried to raise concerns with hospital executives about nurse Lucy Letby. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

Last week the government announced an independent inquiry into how the neonatal nurse was able to murder seven babies and attempt to kill six others. Pressure has been mounting from bereaved families and experts calling to strengthen the investigation to a statutory inquiry where witnesses would be compelled to give evidence

On Tuesday, a senior cabinet minister conceded a statutory inquiry was “on the table”. “I was speaking to the prime minister yesterday and he made it really clear that what we need to do is make sure the families get answers, we learn the lessons as well, and it is a very transparent process that everyone can get behind,” Gillian Keegan, the education secretary, told Times Radio.

“What will happen next is there will be a chair appointed, the chair will work with the families to look at the terms of reference, discuss the pros and cons of different types of inquiry, and then they will come to a conclusion.”

Following the unexplained deaths of seven babies in 2015, Brearey and other senior doctors asked an independent expert to carry out a review. The report was shared with the medical director of Countess of Chester hospital in 2016.

The concerns were responded to in 2016 – by which time Letby had murdered five babies – by a hospital manager who said there was “no evidence” against the nurse “other than a coincidence”.

Brearey said concerns raised by clinicians were “turned on the head”. An experience, he said, that was not uncommon in the NHS. “You go to senior colleagues with a problem and you come away confused and anxious because that problem is being turned in a way in which you start to realise they’re seeing you as a problem rather than the concern that you have,” he said.

Following Letby’s conviction, detectives have started contacting more families believed to be harmed by the nurse, including examining the records of more than 4,000 babies born at the Countess of Chester hospital and Liverpool Women’s hospital.



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