Crime by staff tolerated at hospital, report says

Link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx202ylne5go
Credit: Jenny Rees, Health Correspondent, BBC News and Charlie Buckland, BBC News
Archive: https://archive.ph/wip/t2YJJ

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A report found criminal behaviour among staff, including drugs and theft, went unchallenged

Criminal behaviour by staff, including theft and illegal drugs, went unchallenged at Wales' largest hospital, a report has found.

An "atmosphere of fear" in the surgical department of University Hospital of Wales meant staff did not raise concerns.

The report by Cardiff and Vale health board also found anaesthetic practitioners, external were not always in theatre for the whole operation, but instead were in the anaesthetic room on their phones or watching Netflix.

The health board apologised, saying it had taken action and implemented improvements, but also confirmed a separate review was under way into allegations staff allowed members of the public into the operating theatre to watch surgery.

Behaviour of surgery staff largely went unaddressed as some said they often worked through their breaks, so needed to take food and drink into the anaesthetic room.

It found staff felt belittled and there was a culture where swearing and outright criminal behaviour – including theft and illegal drugs found in a staff locker – went unchallenged.

The report found issues that compromised infection control as staff members of all groups were not wearing a mask properly, did not have bare arms below the elbow and were wearing jewellery or nail varnish.

The poor state of the hospital was also raised as repair and cleanliness was below expected standards, with several cases of pigeons being found in trauma theatres or on the theatre corridor.

The report found teams often worked against each other, impacting the efficiency of theatres and a failure to follow policies enabled behaviours to go unchecked, leading to people feeling let down and unsafe.

Health board bosses confirmed one person was caught with drugs prior to this investigation and it was reported to police, who did not bring charges.

That person is still working at the health board after a disciplinary process.

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Cleanliness was below expected standards, with pigeons found in theatres and theatre corridors


An anonymous complaint of racism was also made to management and the Nursing and Midwifery Council - an investigation was held and the person accused was suspended, but no further action was taken as there was insufficient evidence.

The reluctance of staff to speak up made complaints difficult to address, the health board said, which is why work was being done to change and improve the culture.

In a joint statement, the health board's Suzanne Rankin and Paul Bostock said while the report was "very disappointing and concerning", safety remained a top priority.

They added: "The health board will now consider the findings, recommended actions and implications of the service review as it develops a management response and a detailed action plan to make urgent improvements and address quality and safety issues.

"Colleagues directly involved in theatres will receive a copy of the report and will be supported by a series of face-to-face briefings with the chief operating officer and other senior colleagues."

There are 12 operating theatres at the hospital, external which bosses said were used to carry out 10,700 operations each year.

The majority of these, about 7,000, are emergency cases which are carried out 24/7, they added.
 
Criminal behaviour by staff, including theft and illegal drugs
in the anaesthetic room on their phones or watching Netflix
staff allowed members of the public into the operating theatre
take food and drink into the anaesthetic room
culture where swearing and outright criminal behaviour – including theft and illegal drugs
What, uh, what kind of "staff"?

An anonymous complaint of racism was also made
an investigation was held
the person accused was suspended
no further action was taken as there was insufficient evidence
Amazing that they couldn't do anything about all the other ongoing criminal & dangerous behaviour, but managed to leap into action and punish the one anonymously accused, even without evidence!
 
What, uh, what kind of "staff"?


Amazing that they couldn't do anything about all the other ongoing criminal & dangerous behaviour, but managed to leap into action and punish the one anonymously accused, even without evidence!
Well, that's how retarded the NHS in Wales is.

I'm just waiting for ITV to get the rights to the show where people are invited into Theatre...

OP IDOL

I'll get my (white) coat...
 
The report by Cardiff and Vale health board also found anaesthetic practitioners, external were not always in theatre for the whole operation, but instead were in the anaesthetic room on their phones or watching Netflix
That's the whole point of specializing in anesthesia though. Pretty sure they give you an iPad with the diploma.
 
An update on this c/o Wales Online:


A report into behaviour and standards at the hospital has been released - not good at all...

Some right humdingers:

"The reviewers heard examples of where people behaved in a dysregulated way including shouting, displaying overtly confrontational body language, using language that falls below expectable standards in reasonable discourse including swearing and outright criminal behaviour including theft and illegal drugs found in staff lockers," the report reads.

It also found that "individuals were spoken to in a belittling manner when they made mistakes in front of others, which negatively affected psychological safety".

Anaesthetic practitioners were not always in theatre for the whole of operations, and would sometimes instead be in the anaesthetic room on their phones or watching Netflix. The health board told us: "It's not appropriate for them to be watching Netflix in a clinical environment and those issues have been picked up and dealt with."

"..several occasions when pigeons were found in trauma theatre or on the theatre corridor" amid wider concerns over disrepair of the theatres.

It reads: "The department's repair and cleanliness standards are below what is expected for a modern theatre suite. There are significant delays in fixing leaks and essential equipment. Poor lighting in some theatres makes operations challenging, while cluttered corridors highlight insufficient storage. Leaks in corridors may reduce patient confidence."

'..two patients recently came close to going under the knife without giving proper consent. One of the patients was already under anaesthetic by the time staff realised the error "at the very last moment".

'a senior leader "commented that a group of Indian nurses required name badges because they 'all looked the same'".
 
the degree varies, but crime is tolerated at basically EVERY workplace
it's a matter of what's going to land in the company's lap, what's deniable, what makes money, what they don't care about
 
There's no point applying rationality to the NHS. It was created as the product of lunatic fantasists and has never looked back.

You can trace it back to the Beveridge Report of 1942. That stated that the development of health and rehabilitation services would lead to a reduction in the number of cases requiring them forecasting a service that would diminish disease by prevention and cure, and that future developments would reduce the number of cases requiring health service care. i.e. it would remedy existing ills and thereafter its costs would recede.

A certain Enoch Powell (unrecognised national hero and visionary) as long ago as 1961 referred to this as a miscalculation of sublime dimensions saying that it seemed virtually certain that the increasing outlay as medical science progressed would be more and more ‘uneconomic’. He identified that progress in medicine consisted not of doing things more cheaply and simply, but in discovering complex and difficult things to do that previously could not be done at all and that medicine was buying life at an ever-increasing marginal cost.

The legislation to establish the NHS was introduced in 1946. The annual costs estimate estimate was £110 million. By the end of 1947 that had increased to £179 million. This 62% increase was before the NHS even existed. The NHS started in July 1948. At the start of 1949 an additional £79 million was added so we are now up to £258 million. The actual cost in 1949/50 was £305 million and in 1950/51 was £384 million.

The funding of NHS England (so excluding the Jocks, Taffies and Paddies) in 2025 was set at £179 billion plus £4.6 billion following the 2024 spring budget.

I've not adjusted for inflation and going from the 1940s to the 2020s is not an apples to apples comparison courtesy of governmental accounting skulduggery but it's fair to say that the initial premise of the NHS was a delusion and it's got exponentially worse ever since.

Not that this was of any concern to those who created the NHS. Aneurin Beven, the government minister who pushed it through said at the time "money ought not to be permitted to stand in the way of obtaining an efficient health service". (It's not Gen Z teenagers who need basic finance and budgeting education.) By 1950, Beven's (Labour) government legislated to allow for charges for drugs, spectacles and false teeth. The much vaunted "free at the point of delivery" line in the sand survived less than 3 years. (Yes it wasn't the evil Tories who introduced the concept of NHS charges.) They didn't actually have the balls to impose those charges but Bevan resigned in 1951 anyway.

The fantasy was not limited to the costs. The expected outcomes were also fantasy. The big one was the premise that the number of cases requiring health service care would reduce. You can argue about efficiency; it's one of those terms so loved by politicians as it's intrinsically nebulous. However, an example from Bevan's opening paragraphs as recorded in Hansard when he introduced the legislation (for 2nd reading) is golden.

"The condition of the teeth of the people of Britain is a national reproach. ...... one of the first merits of this Bill is that it provides a universal health service without any insurance qualifications of any sort. It is available to the whole population, and not only is it available to the whole population freely, but it is intended, through the health service, to generalise the best health advice and treatment. It is intended that there shall be no limitation on the kind of assistance given—the general practitioner service, the specialist, the hospitals, eye treatment, spectacles, dental treatment, hearing facilities, all these are to be made available free. There will be some limitations for a while, because we are short of many things. We have not enough dentists a...... Nevertheless, it is the object of the Bill, and of the scheme, to provide this as soon as possible, and to provide it universally."

One of the things drummed into Britbongs over decades is "The NHS is the envy of the world". Funny thing is no one has decided to replicate this modern wonder of the world. Strange that.
 
with several cases of pigeons being found in trauma theatres or on the theatre corridor.
Hey, I managed to find some undercover footage of one of the doctors they hired:

(Don't worry, ribs grow back.)
 
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