The Scotsman

Surgeon was ‘allowed to carry on harming patients’ by health board, says BBC probe

● Professor faces damages claims over botched ops

- By BRIAN FERGUSON

A surgeon being pursued for damages by dozens of patients was allowed to botch operations for years without a health board having any checks in place to pick up mistakes, according to a BBC Scotland investigat­ion. A documentar­y to be broadcast tonight suggests Professor Muftah Salem Eljamel was not stopped by NHS Tayside even after an external investigat­ion found he was injuring patients.

The investigat­ion has uncovered claims that some patients were told that operations had taken place when they had not actually been carried out.

Prof Eljamel, a neurologic­al surgeon in Tayside since 1995, was suspended in 2014 after a patient had surgery on the wrong spinal disc at Ninewells Hospital, Dundee.

Prof Eljamel avoided a General Medical Council tribunal three years ago after removing himself from the medical register in the wake of up to 100 cases emerging against him.

Although this meant he is no longer able to practise medicine in the UK, Prof Eljamel. formerly of Newport-on-tay, is understood to be running a neurosurge­ry business in the United States.

Thebbcscot­landdisclo­sure programme asked patients of Prof Eljamel to access their medical records and, with their permission, shared their scans and notes with expert neurosurge­on Donald Campbell.

In one case Mr Campbell said that Prof Eljamel had over-stated a spinal operation’s chances of success. In two others, he believes the surgery was not done at all.

Mr Campbell told the

programme: “Well that was negligent. There’s no other descriptio­n. It’s completely unacceptab­le.”

Referring to one case of a former patient, Patrick Kelly, who believed he had spinal surgery in 2007, Mr Campbell said: “As far as I can see, he’s never actually removed any bone or disc.

“He’s opened the patient and then come out again.

“I can’t think of any explanatio­n why that should be done. To claim that you have done an operation in this critical area,

DONALD CAMPBELL

and then not to do it, knowing that the result of approachin­g the area and not operating on it will be to leave such scar tissue that no-one else is going to operate on it shows a complete lack of any considerat­ion for the patient.”

NHS Tayside told the documentar­y team that it first became aware of concerns in June 2013 and that they took “immediatea­ction”andplaced Prof Eljamel “under supervisio­n” while they reviewed his work.

They also called in the Royal

Collegeofs­urgeonsine­ngland to investigat­e Prof Eljamel. But the documentar­y claims that even at the point the surgeon was under supervisio­n, he was still able to harm patients.

The programme also says an internal NHS Tayside report stated the recognised practice was for a surgeon to carry out an X-ray on the patient’s spine on the operating table to ensure surgery was carried out on the correct disc, but that Prof Eljamel would instead “manually manipulate and count the spinal bones”, and

operate without taking the X-ray.

The documentar­y also claims he taught junior surgeons to operate in this way, and that they too harmed patients.

A spokeswoma­n for NHS Tayside said: “There has been much learning by the organisati­on immediatel­y following these events and many improvemen­ts have been made over the past five years.”

Prof Eljamel’s lawyer told BBC Scotland his client had “no comment to make”.

COMMENT

“To claim that you have done an operation in this critical area, andthennot­todoit shows a complete lack of any considerat­ion for the patient”

 ??  ?? 0 Clockwise from top left: Professor Muftah Salem Eljamel, patient Patrick Kelly, Brian Mcconnachi­e QC and neurosurge­on Donald Campbell with reporter Lucy Adams
0 Clockwise from top left: Professor Muftah Salem Eljamel, patient Patrick Kelly, Brian Mcconnachi­e QC and neurosurge­on Donald Campbell with reporter Lucy Adams
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