Deccan Chronicle

Lethal opiate doses killed over 450 in UK

NHS guilty of fatalities between 1989 and 2000

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London, June 20: An inquiry has revealed that up to 650 patients had died from lethal doses of opiate painkiller­s given “without medical justificat­ion” over 12 years at Gosport War Memorial Hospital in Hampshire, an NHS hospital, the British government has said. Criminal charges could now follow.

A public inquiry found that during the tenure of one general practition­er, Dr Jane Barton, an “institutio­nalised practice of shortening lives” between 1989 and 2000 took place. Hospital staff “marginalis­ed” families who battled for 20 years

GOSPORT WAR Memorial Hospital in Hampshire administer­ed lethal doses for 12 years

A PUBLIC inquiry found the questionab­le practice under Dr Jane Burton

to have their loved ones’ deaths investigat­ed and complained.

The police and medical regulators “failed” them as they did not act or investigat­e thoroughly.

Health secretary Jeremy Hunt told the House of Commons that it appears Dr Barton was “principall­y responsibl­e” for this practice. But senior consultant­s, nurses, and managers at the hospital were aware of or administer­ed opiates which they should have known could kill the patients.

The Crown Prosecutio­n Service and police would now be reviewing the proof identified by the inquiry to identify charges. The Gosport Indepe-ndent Panel found proof of opioid use without clinical justificat­ion in 456 of the patients who died. Taking into account missing records — incomplete or deleted routinely after a set period — it concludes there are “probably at least another 200 patients were similarly affected”.

“The documents seen by the Panel show that for a 12 year period a clinical assistant, Dr Barton, was responsibl­e for the practice of prescribin­g which prevailed on the wards,” the inquiry chair Bishop of Liverpool James Jones said.

This prescripti­on was allowed to continue with the awareness of senior consultant­s and was carried out by nursing staff who “had a responsibi­lity to challenge this prescribin­g” but did not, the report found. Establishe­d in 2014 the panel reviewed a million pieces of evidence, and spoke to families of more than 2,000 patients who died at the hospital between 1987 and 2001 — though a quarter of these were missing. — Agencies

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