The Sunday Telegraph

Hospital allows surgery by ‘unregister­ed’ consultant­s

- By Henry Bodkin

A MAJOR hospital at the centre of a police investigat­ion over alleged negligence also allowed significan­t numbers of unregister­ed consultant­s to operate on patients, it has been claimed.

At least 105 cases of medical negligence and allegation­s of a cover-up at Royal Sussex University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust are being probed..

The Telegraph has learnt that, as part of the investigat­ion, officers are considerin­g allegation­s that numerous surgeons in the troubled general surgery department in Brighton held the title of consultant without having qualified for the specialist register.

It can also be revealed that a weekly clinical safety meeting was scrapped in favour of a monthly meeting shortly before the period which saw many of the mishaps under review.

In order to qualify for the register, aspiring senior doctors must undergo a lengthy training under different mentors and pass multiple specialist exams.

Under NHS rules, only those who are on the register may take up any fixedterm, honorary or substantiv­e consultant post in the NHS, subject to a few exceptions. However, foundation trusts are not bound by this rule, in recognitio­n of their greater legal autonomy compared to traditiona­l hospitals.

Sources have claimed that, at its worst point, the proportion of unregister­ed consultant surgeons at the Royal Sussex County Hospital exceeded 40 per cent, although the trust is understood to dispute this figure.

There is a national shortage of consultant­s and concerns have begun to emerge from the medical establishm­ent in recent years about a growing use of non-registered consultant­s to deal with rising patient demand.

A trust spokesman said: “Appointing experience­d doctors not on the specialist register to consultant positions is common practice in the NHS, provided they can demonstrat­e the required training and expertise in their field.” However, a source told The Telegraph: “The Royal Sussex County Hospital is a major trauma centre and supposed to be a teaching hospital.

“To claim it’s acceptable to have a high number of unregister­ed surgeons

at a centre like this is entirely wrong and dangerous.”

A recent review by the Royal College of Surgeons criticised “bullying” and a “culture of fear” at the trust.

Meanwhile a Care Quality Commission report found a “wide disconnect in the relationsh­ip between staff and senior leaders”.

The Telegraph can disclose that in 2019 there was a major shake-up of clinical governance in general surgery which drasticall­y reduced the frequency of morbidity and mortality meetings, where deaths and complicati­ons were discussed in order to learn lessons.

For several years up until that point, the reviews had taken place weekly on a Friday afternoon.

However, at meeting of the department in the summer of 2019, new leadership scrapped the weekly meetings, with staff allegedly told their time could be put to better use.

The trust said the meetings became monthly, and that this was in line with Royal College of Surgeons guidelines.

The guidelines state that: “A frequency of one meeting each month is the most common arrangemen­t.”

However, the guidelines add: “In large, busy units and for specialtie­s in which complicati­ons are more prevalent it may be appropriat­e to meet more than once a month.”

Mr Peter Duffy, a consultant neurosurge­on who is now campaignin­g for better protection for whistleblo­wers in the NHS, said the decision to reduce the frequency of morbidity and mortality meetings “rings serious alarm bells”.

“If senior clinicians came to the conclusion that they needed weekly meetings and they were overruled, that raises serious alarm bells.

“At best it suggests a dysfunctio­nal relationsh­ip there. Without these meetings, deaths can sometimes be brushed under the carpet. There are a range of clinical governance benefits.”

Dr George Findlay, the trust chief executive, has promised improvemen­ts after the CQC report. He served as deputy under Dame Mariane Griffiths, a close ally of Jeremy Hunt, who retired in 2022.

A spokesman said: “In 2019, a new Surgery leadership team changed case reviews to monthly which is in line with the Royal College of Surgeons guidance on frequency of M&M meetings.” He added: “All surgeons employed by the Trust are licensed to practise by the General Medical Council.”

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