The Scotsman

Inquiry into hospital campus woes to focus on ‘witness perception­s’

- By DOUGLAS BARRIE

An inquiry into issues surroundin­g two major hospital campuses in Scotland will focus on the "witness's perception­s" of how they were affected.

The Scottish Hospitals Inquiry is due to begin on September 20, looking into the recent constructi­on of the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital (QEUH) and Royal Hospital for Children (RHC) in Glasgow, and the Royal Hospital for Children and Young People and Department of Clinical Neuroscien­ces (RHCYP/DCN) in Edinburgh.

At a procedural hearing yesterday, inquiry chairman Lord

Brodie said the inquiry will be held over five weeks with evidence running into November after a two-week break in October.

Alastair Duncan QC, counsel to the inquiry, told the hearing: "I cannot emphasise enough that the focus of the hearings in September is the witness's perception­s of what happened to them.

"In a very real sense, I intend to do no more than gather their evidence that we can then use in our further investigat­ions and so, consistent with that, I do not see challengin­g the evidence in September, in any way, as being part of my remit at this point."

Lord Brodie also announced the inquiry will be held at offices near Edinburgh's St Andrew's Square with scope for a facility in Glasgow to watch proceeding­s for those who may not have access to watch online.

However, he ended the hearing by admitting the inquiry is still "dependent on the course of the pandemic and the Government's response to that".

The inquiry was ordered after patients at the Glasgow site died from infections linked to pigeon droppings and water supply, and the opening of the Edinburgh site was delayed due to ventilatio­n concerns.

Kimberly Darroch, the mother of ten-year-old Milly Main who died in the QEUH in 2017 after contractin­g an infection, launched legal action against NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde (NHSGGC) as she blames contaminat­ed water in the £842 million hospital for her daughter's death.

The new Edinburgh Sick Kids facility had been due to open in July 2019, but the then Health Secretary, Jeane Freeman, halted the move from the existing site until March this year as final compliance checks revealed the ventilatio­n system in the critical care department did not meet the necessary standards.

Mr Duncan also said it "seems likely that there will be a smaller group of witnesses in relation to Edinburgh".

He added: "It seems likely that most of those who give evidence will be people who have experience of the Glasgow hospitals - the QUEH and the RHC.

"Witnesses will be asked to identify and to describe any particular problems that they encountere­d during treatment or involvemen­t with the hospitals, those problems may include health issues experience­d by patients - most still obviously infections that impacted upon care, and upon health.

"Another example is the use of prophylact­ic antibiotic­s and the impact that that may have had upon treatment, and indeed upon health, but we'll also look at other sorts of problems.”

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