Sunday Mirror

Nurse’s £50k con for shifts she never did

NHS worker is struck off for A&E overtime claims

- SASKIA ROWLANDS LEE SORRELL saskia.rowlands@reachplc.com

EXCLUSIVE

BY and

A NURSE has been struck off for a £50,000 overtime scam.

Patience Machingaut­a pocketed the cash over two years after claiming for shifts she didn’t work at the country’s top-rated A&E.

A disciplina­ry panel found she had fraudulent­ly received pay for 144 bogus shifts between 2017 and 2019 at Luton and Dunstable Hospital in Bedfordshi­re.

Its A&E treats 18,000 patients a month, and at the time of her swindle was visited by MPs as a shining example to other hospitals after figures showed it was the best performing in England.

Health investigat­ors saw evidence Machingaut­a had been cheating the NHS since 2015 – a decade after she qualified as a nurse.

A Nursing and Midwifery Council hearing was told she had computer access to the staffing system.

GHOST

When she moved to another department she continued to claim using a colleague’s login.

She was rumbled when a senior sister spotted discrepanc­ies in the online roster compared to handwritte­n entries in the emergency department’s diary.

When Machingaut­a was confronted about five shifts she had claimed for in January 2019, she said she had been doing training rather than working in A&E.

However, health chiefs were not convinced and an investigat­ion found she had claimed for “ghost shifts” that were then removed so that there was no trace of them within the system.

Machingaut­a said she could not explain why her name did not appear in the paper diary when it was on the online rota.

She also claimed she had not noticed the “over-payments” in her bank account.

However, Machingaut­a later admitted a “genuine error”.

She also agreed to repay £36,702 to the Bedfordshi­re Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and was sacked.

Machingaut­a did not appear before the panel but said in a letter: “I accept what I did was really wrong and I understand the seriousnes­s of this case. I have humiliated myself and lost a good reputation. I cannot express enough how remorseful I am for what I did.”

The NMC disciplina­ry panel ruled: “Mrs Machingaut­a was well aware she was dishonestl­y booking shifts that she had not worked.

“Mrs Machingaut­a had done this for significan­t personal financial gain and that she took conscious steps to cover her tracks.”

When approached at home, she declined to comment.

The case was referred to the NHS Counter Fraud Authority but the Trust said it was unaware of any criminal action and declined to comment further.

‘‘

Mrs Machingaut­a did this for significan­t personal gain and took steps to cover her tracks

 ?? ?? HOSPITAL had top rated A&E
RUMBLED Machingaut­a expressed her remorse
HOSPITAL had top rated A&E RUMBLED Machingaut­a expressed her remorse

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