A lady who work for the UK
health department and also reveals flaws in the NHS about poor patient care are
to be protected by sweeping reforms that will bring an end to the cover-up
culture in hospitals.
The measures will be
announced in Parliament by the Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt in response to a
review that he commissioned into the treatment of staff who speak out.
The review by Sir Robert
Francis, who led the inquiry into the Mid-Staffs scandal, has been delayed by
two months because he received more than 18,000 responses, many of them from
doctors and nurses who were sacked for sounding the alarm.
Sir Robert is expected to
warn that poor care at failing hospitals went undetected for many years because
staff concerns were suppressed.
Dr David Drew, a consultant
paediatrician, says he was sacked for gross misconduct because he spoke out
over the death of a toddler.
He says for too long the
NHS and Department of Health have done nothing to support whistleblowers.
He told Sky News:
"They have not lifted a finger to help us. Patients are suffering,
patients are dying.
"The staff who would
like to speak up for them are being hamstrung by the people in charge of these
hospitals."
Sir Robert is expected to
make a series of recommendations to ensure NHS workers can raise public
interest concerns without fear of recrimination - and that appropriate action
is taken as a result.
Those who mistreat
whistleblowers could also be held to account.
However, Sir Robert will
not re-open any previous cases under the reforms.
Julie Bailey, whose mother
died at Stafford Hospital in 2007 and successfully campaigned for an inquiry
into the Trust, said: "In his first inquiry, Robert Francis recommended
that there would be criminal sanctions against those who try to silence whistleblowers.
"We need this
Government now to put that recommendation into action."
Nurse Jennie Fecitt, who
was bullied and victimised after raising concerns about a colleague who had
claimed to have qualifications he did not, told Sky News: "My main concern
was patient safety.
"He didn't possess the
essential qualifications for the job that he was doing which was seeing
patients, diagnosing and treating them autonomously as a primary care nurse, no
reference to a doctor.
"So he was in a
considerable position of responsibility."
Calling for protection for
whistleblowers, Ms Fecitt said: "I have a duty to make patients my first
concern. It's non-negotiable."
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