The Scotsman

Charities criticise NHS Tayside over ‘unacceptab­le’ care

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE Health Correspond­ent

Charities last night hit out at NHS Tayside over the “unacceptab­le” treatment of 14 breast cancer patients who died after a decision to lower the standard chemothera­py dosage,

NHS Tayside is changing its treatment regime after a watchdog report found patients were being given a lower dose of drugs than in the rest of Scotland.

Healthcare Improvemen­t Scotland (HIS) found patients were not informed about the difference in treatment at the time. The health board has since written to 304 patients who had chemothera­py for breast cancer from 1 December, 2016 to this month. They have been offered an appointmen­t with an oncologist.

Baroness Delyth Morgan, chief executive at Breast Cancer Care and Breast Cancer Now, said: “We welcome the independen­t inquiry to fully understand the causes and clinical impact of the decision to lower the standard chemothera­py dosage for patients.

“While we are reassured that the risk of any negative impact on patients’ outcomes is likely to have been small, such variation in best practice is unacceptab­le and we need to understand how it has been allowed to happen.

“For patients that have been affected, and any families who have very sadly since lost loved ones, this may provoke some distressin­g questions about their care, and it’s vital they now receive the informatio­n and support they need.

“Patients must be able to count on receiving a consistent and agreed standard of care no matter where they live in Scotland.”

NHS Tayside has now said 14 of these patients have died and an independen­t expert will review the treatment these women were given.

Chief Medical Officer, Dr Catherine Calderwood, and Chief Pharmaceut­ical Officer, Dr Rose Marie Parr, ordered the investigat­ion after concerns were raised “about variations in treatment compared with other health boards”.

Scottish Labour’s health spokeswoma­n Monica Lennon said: “The news that 14 women died after receiving lower than recommende­d dosages during chemothera­py treatment at NHS Tayside is deeply worrying.

“It is right an independen­t expert will investigat­e these deaths to give families the answers they need, but this should not have happened.”

 ?? PICTURE: MICHAEL MCGURK ?? Mural artist and illustrato­r KMG puts the finishing touches to a new arcade cabinet for V&A Dundee’s exhibition Videogames: Design/play/disrupt which opens next Saturday. The cabinet was designed by We Throw Switches and painted at the Pianodrome warehouse in Edinburgh.
PICTURE: MICHAEL MCGURK Mural artist and illustrato­r KMG puts the finishing touches to a new arcade cabinet for V&A Dundee’s exhibition Videogames: Design/play/disrupt which opens next Saturday. The cabinet was designed by We Throw Switches and painted at the Pianodrome warehouse in Edinburgh.

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