Birmingham Post

Trust failed two patients who died from sepsis

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AN NHS trust has pleaded guilty to safety failings posing a “significan­t risk of avoidable harm” following the deaths of two patients.

A lawyer acting for the Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust admitted two breaches of the

2008 Health and Social Care Act on the Trust’s behalf.

A hearing at the town’s magistrate­s’ court was told the proceeding­s followed an investigat­ion by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) into the care provided by the Trust before the deaths of mother-of-six Natalie Billingham and teenager Kaysie-Jane Robinson.

The charges admitted by the trust stated that it had failed to provide treatment in a safe way, resulting in harm, in February and March 2018.

In a statement issued earlier this year, the CQC said it had brought the prosecutio­n following two specific incidents in which patients died at Russells Hall Hospital, Dudley.

A previous hearing was told by counsel for the CQC, Ian Bridge, that the charges related to clinical care given to 33-year-old Ms Billingham before her death, and to Kaysie-Jane, who was aged 14 when she died.

He told the court both patients had been treated for sepsis.

The Dudley Group Trust’s lawyer, Paul Spencer, said the organisati­on’s guilty plea in respect of Natalie Billingham was being entered on the basis that it did not accept its failings led to her death.

But Mr Spencer added that the trust did accept that the “poor care and treatment” of KaysieJane Robinson had caused her death.

Adjourning the case, which was not opened by the prosecutio­n, District Judge Graham Wilkinson described the proceeding­s as “the most serious case this court is likely to deal with in many a year”.

Judge Wilkinson told the lawyers involved in the case: “I am grateful that we have made significan­t progress this afternoon. I am sure the families will be grateful as well.”

A further case management hearing will take place at the same court on September 3.

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> The trust failed to provide treatment in a safe way

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