Daily Mail

Not good enough! Hospitals STILL failing on sepsis

- By Ben Wilkinson

ONE in four hospital trusts are failing to give lifesaving sepsis drugs to half of patients in time, despite the latest NHS guidelines.

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said patients were still dying needlessly, but insisted the NHS had made ‘significan­t progress’.

Fresh guidelines were recently introduced to help diagnose the killer condition, which is notoriousl­y difficult to spot until it has spread throughout the body.

Under revised NHS rules, anyone showing signs of the illness should be assessed and treated within 60 minutes of arriving at hospital.

Yet NHS England figures – to be revealed on BBC’s Panorama tonight – show that 24 out of 104 acute hospital trusts failed to administer intravenou­s antibiotic­s within an hour to half the patients considered to need the treatment. The statistics also showed that 14 of the trusts failed to spot signs of suspected sepsis in half of patients.

Mr Hunt told the programme: ‘I wouldn’t pretend that we get this right everywhere.

‘We’re on a journey, we definitely need to do a lot better but I think we have made significan­t progress.

‘There are preventabl­e deaths happening but we’re bringing them down.’

The figures, which date back to 2015, showed ten hospital trusts identified every suspected sepsis case, while six out of ten patients needing antibiotic­s were getting them within the first hour.

The Daily Mail launched a major End the Sepsis Scandal campaign last year to raise awareness of the devastatin­g illness which kills 44,000 in Britain every year.

It came after one-year- old William Mead died in December 2014 following a series of errors by doctors and staff.

Known as the ‘silent killer’, sepsis is the leading cause of avoidable death in the UK.

It develops when an infection such as blood poisoning sparks a violent immune response in which the body attacks its own organs.

If it is caught early enough, antibiotic­s can control the infection before the body’s immune response goes into overdrive.

Indicators in adults and older children include a high or low body temperatur­e, chills and shivering, a fast heartbeat, and rapid breathing.

Parents of children under five should take them to A&E or call 999 immediatel­y if their skin looks bluish or pale or if they are difficult to wake.

BBC reporter Alistair Jack

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