Sloven and the ligature risks

A few weeks ago, we found out someone sent an anonymous letter to the Sloven CEO in 2011 flagging up health and safety concerns. Katrina Percy was, of course, totally oblivious. An independent Health and Safety consultant, Mike Holder, was appointed to troubleshoot. Two months later, he handed in his notice. Sloven were not prepared to listen or act.

Holder has shared the relevant documents and his leaving report with the Care Quality Commission (CQC), the Health and Safety Executive and Hampshire MPs, Suella Fernandes and Kit Malthouse. I caught up with some of this paperwork this evening. A couple of things leap out (outside of Holder’s meticulous detailing of the myriad ways Sloven were breaking Health and Safety legislation). These relate to ligature risks.

Holder shared this diagram showing the increase in ligature incidents over four years with the Interim Director of Nursing and AHP (dunno what AHP stands for) in Feb 2012.

lig incidents

Her reply is enough to make hair follicles seal up:

Nurse reply

Holder’s reply. Challenging the nonsensical with sense and clarity:  

Holder reply

Rich and I chatted about this earlier. He was reminded of this quote from Clifford Geertz, a classic anthropologist

I have never been impressed by the argument that as complete objectivity is impossible… one might as well let one’s sentiments run loose. As Robert Solow has remarked, that is like saying as a perfectly aseptic environment is impossible, one might as well conduct surgery in a sewer. 

Sloven clearly and consistently embrace the sewer approach with an abandon and a carelessness that is sickening. [There was another report today about the death of another patient/Sloven failings. Lesley Stevens, who seems to have a full time job attending inquests, was again bleating about ‘changes’.]

Changes my arse.

Dipping back to Feb 2012, the second, related point, is around action plans and (non) actions. Someone working with Holder emailed him with serious concerns around ligature risks. The assessor was concerned that either the risk scoring was inaccurate or signalled a general lack of understanding about how to complete ligature risk assessments. Both were deeply worrying. He concludes:

Finally there are action plans in each of the assessments which list all the points where actions are required; there appears to be no record of any actions being completed. This raises the question as to whether the actions have been completed at all, and the assessments not updated to reflect that, or whether the actions are still outstanding.

The same old, same old shite. Across four years now. Documented and shared with the senior management team. Who ignore it.

Given that Holder’s appointment came about because of an anonymous letter raising safety issues, you’d think his resignation and the various health and safety breaches he identified in a couple of months, would be taken seriously.  But no. It was business as usual. Six months later, in August 2012, a quality review, detailing shocking failings at the unit where LB died, was similarly ignored. [Howl]

Fast forward to April 2016, whipping past numerous failed CQC inspections, numerous deaths, inquests and Prevention of Future Deaths reports. Past the publication of the Mazars review… to which Sloven, four years after the above discussion about ligature risk, applied the same baseline stats (non) defence. The latest CQC inspection report will be published later this week. The Sloven senior team are, by all accounts, mounting their schmooze counter-attack. There isn’t a reflexive bone in their collective body that allows them to think, hang on a minute… We’ve really ballsed up here. Repeatedly. Patients have died. Repeatedly. And we clearly can’t do what is needed to improve the services we provide…

Nah. Nothing like it.

This CQC inspection was part of Jezza Hunt’s response to the Mazars review. It was the necessary first step before the CQC and NHS Improvement decide on any regulatory action. [I know]. Given the inspection identified failures generating warning notices a week or so ago. Given everything that has gone before. Given everything. There cannot be any more propping up of this toxic senior management shower. Surely.

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‘What the Verita?’ and broken narratives

Been at a Broken Narratives conference this week in Prato, Italy. Fascinating papers and people, good company, sunshine and piazzas. What a privilege. Now I’m thinking about Verita and the two ‘independent’ reviews they did about LB [howl]. For which they must have been paid a costa del fortune.

We were naffed off with the second review pretty much from the start really. And the finished version made no sense. Having read the transcripts from the staff interviews for the first review, shared with us before LB’s inquest, our confidence dropped to the level of ‘What the Verita?‘ Flimsy interviews, heavy on the interviewer blather and little or no probing.

Mmm. What the Verita indeedy?

verita

The second paragraph on their website blurb is a bit peculiar. It seems to be a veiled way of reassuring organisations [the NHS] that might want a bit of shonky, that they do a good enough job without doing a thorough, robust and warts and all investigation. Stating our approach is always measured, appropriate and focused on improvement pretty much says ‘we do superficial, skeletons remain buried and we’ll come up with a few suggestions’. And this is exactly what they did.

The first review, focusing on the immediacy of what happened to LB, failed to uncover that a patient died in the same bath as LB several years before. Despite two of the staff Verita interviewed being present on both occasions. [No words]. Despite the original terms of reference (a) including direct reference to the earlier patient and the slightly revised terms of reference (b) alluding to it:

(a) ‘to review how learning out of concerns from a previous similar incident has been embedded in practice and informed care practice and safety’

 

(b) ‘to review how learning out of concerns from any previous similar incidents/external reports has been embedded in practice and informed care practice and safety.’

Verita just ignored this in their first review. Their methods simply failed to uncover what was clearly a very well known about earlier incident. I suspect it’s hard to ‘forget’ being present when someone dies whatever the circumstances…

In an NHS hospital.
In a bath.
And a second person dies in the same bath

Nah. It really shouldn’t take a police investigation, an unfinished HSE investigation, two ‘independent’ reviews and almost an inquest to not unearth this.

Moving onto the baffling and serious pile of crap, second review (Verita2). We declined to comment on the draft we received last summer. George Julian who represented us on the expert review panel similarly withdrew from the process. She details her 10 reasons why here. I wouldn’t recommend wasting time reading the review. It is truly nonsensical.

Sloven’s legal team clamoured to get Verita2 admitted as evidence to LB’s inquest while spending £42,000 [of public money] in legal fees to try to sink publication of the Mazars review. [This underlines how non independent Verita really are]. It was eventually published, to silence at the end of October 2015.

Last week (was it really only last week?) we were leaked a Quality and Safety Review written by a Sloven employee in August 2012. This clearly documents numerous failures at STATT where LB died and the next door unit, John Sharich House a few months before Sloven took over the provision. In Verita 2, Finding 5 states:

The trust undertook appropriate, adequate and reasonable due diligence into the quality and safety of the services prior to acquisition. The due diligence reviews did not identify any acute concerns about the safety of services in STATT. The more acute concerns were focused on the non-Oxfordshire services.

Mmm. Awkward. Gut wrenchingly, howlingly, awkward.

I emailed a Verita partner to say, erm.. little bit of a cock up here, matey. Twice. He emailed back, very sharpish, to say they’d seen the review I mentioned [clearly they hadn’t or they couldn’t possibly produce Finding 5] and there was no mention of the earlier death in the staff interviews. He finished by saying Verita ‘obviously investigated in detail the processes and practices within the unit – these underpinned the conclusions reached in the report’.

Blimey.

I think, in this inhumanely long, tortuous and consistently distressing journey we’ve learned there is nothing obvious on the part of the actions of any of the state, or state appointed representatives, other than deny, deceive, batter and deflect. Verita did (can’t even call it conducted) two, very well paid, reviews. Neither hold up to scrutiny.

I thought my email would lead to them seizing the opportunity to defend their independent, robust and experienced reputation. And turn a lens on their practices; retract, respond, revise and openly talk about what they will do in future to make sure NHS Trusts disclose all the relevant documentation. But that was before I read their website blurb.

[Fill in your own words here. I have none. And feel free to swear your fucking socks off].

I listened to a diverse set of papers in the last few days. Thoughtful, engaged reflections about listening to the experiences of people who may not be able to articulate their experiences in ‘recognisable’ ways. People who are too often silenced by the actions of others (including researchers).

About trying to open up, challenge and change academic practices (it was an academic conference..) We heard narratives about dementia, cancer, trauma, brain injury, hearing voices, autism, sexuality, child sexual abuse

I’m now thinking that there are some truly broken narratives in spaces you wouldn’t think to look.

prato

What does today mean?

L1018852Version 1

The Care Quality Commission issued a warning notice to Sloven. Ahead of publishing the latest inspection report that took place in January (after publication of the Mazars review and Jezza Hunt’s apparently serious engagement in the House of Commons on December 10th). This warning notice allowed NHS Improvement (previously Monitor (I know.. keep up..) to issue a statement saying they’ve put an additional condition into the Trust’s licence allowing NHS Improvement to make changes at board level.

This now opens a space for some serious action to take place. Particularly given that the still to be published CQC inspection clearly demonstrates continuing failings by Sloven on top of the harrowing findings revealed by the #Mazars review and numerous CQC inspections over nearly three years. That they only made improvements after the warning notice suggests they don’t have a bloody clue.

A laborious and painstaking approach that needs to be followed to allow effective action to happen.

Version 2

Fuck all.

How was today for us?

I came out of a meeting at 1pm. To emails from the CQC and NHS Improvement. Calls from the BBC/ITV. Reading the CQC statement I felt a mix of rage, despair, distress, sadness and more rage. I arranged to go to BBC Oxford late afternoon. ITV Meridian to interview Rich. Updates during the afternoon about an anticipated statement from the Sloven CEO. Work (again) parked for another weekend/evening slot. Meal at mate’s house postponed.

Expectation and anticipation.

Katrina Percy, Mike Petter and the board would have to go. That was obvious. You cannot, given everything that’s happened, keep talking about making changes and doing crap all (or worse). The continuing and clearly evidenced shite was not only damning for Sloven but was also turning a spotlight on the Care Quality Commission and NHS Improvement. How much more non regulation could possibly (not) happen?

She said she wasn’t going to resign. She needed to lead. And then talked about leading in a way that no leader ever would. I spent a couple of hours in BBC Oxford. BBC News, live BBC 24 hour news and BBC Radio Oxford. Live BBC News was streamed in the various spaces I hung out in. LB’s photo constantly in the background.

I came out in early evening sunshine. Into Summertown. The 700 bus came along. I caught it instead of changing buses in Oxford. The bus finished it’s route in the grounds of the JR hospital. Where LB didn’t die.

 

 

 

One way wriggle to the moon

The big shocker (and there were were several) during LB’s inquest was the revelation on Day 4 that a patient died in the same bath as LB in 2006. The Responsible Clinician let it be known, through her counsel, that she had been actively discouraged by members of Sloven senior management from raising the issue of this earlier death. In the same bath…

Ground spinning stuff. Sloven revealing new depths of odious deceitfulness and an astonishingly relentless determination to not be open, honest or transparent.

It transpired that two staff members were on site and involved in the response to LB and the earlier patient’s death. And (at least) two other staff members worked at the unit in 2006. I wrote about this a while back.

[Howl].

How this patient’s death was not mentioned to the police, the coroner, the HSE, Verita, to us, until this reveal on October 9 2015, is just, I dunno. I’m running out of words.

He died of natural causes apparently. Though this was simply guesswork. There was no postmortem or inquest despite him being only 57 and fully expected to come out of the bathroom alive that day…

At points like this I almost expect (hope) my keyboard will spontaneously combust. The utter wrongness of what I jab out on the keys, over and over again… Wrongness and repeated wrongness. With no glimpse of right or just ever happening.

Today we got a letter from the coroner. I’ve been a bit of a champion of the coroner but my champ tokens are running out now. He said at the end of LB’s inquest he would ask Sloven to explain why the first death wasn’t disclosed earlier. I chased him up about this a few weeks ago. [Note: You have to chase up everything. No one in authority volunteers anything.]

He replied:

I received an apology from the trust in December and an explanation that there was no active decision to withhold the information and that it was simply the case that the matters known to the trust did not suggest that there was a real link to LB’s death and therefore it did not occur to the trust to inform me. As I say, this is the explanation received from the trust. It should have been raised earlier.

Wow. Simply just wow.

‘Simply the case’… ‘No active decision’? Matters did not suggest there was a real link? The same bath. A seizure. The same staff present? No real link? Oh, and active discouragement from raising it…

Southern Health NHS Foundation Trust are arrogant/deluded/I don’t know what enough to defend the indefensible even after the Mazars review findings are public. How could this person’s death not be relevant? And who are they to decide whether it is or not?

What sort of monstrousness are we dealing with here?

The coroner finishes with the statement:

I am afraid that I am unable to assist or comment any further due to the fact that I no longer have any legal jurisdiction once a case is concluded.

So Sloven should have raised it but they didn’t. Hey ho. Nothing like a bit of one way wriggle room to the moon. Cards stacked clearly in favour of the system. Against people/families. A simple siloing which enables every official to pass the buck. My bit is fine. I’m ticking the boxes involved in my role. And I don’t have to look at the bigger picture.

Until the various players/actors involved in or associated with this almighty mess are prepared to step up and act, we may as well chuck in the towel.

Here’s a thought. Why not give stepping up a go?

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Monitor and the (non) improvement director

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‘Er, Jim, you know we said we’d appoint an improvement director for that Trust, down south. You know. The one that was caught out covering up learning disability deaths?’

‘Yes. I remember. How could I forget? That godawful meeting with that service user’s mother. Dreadful, dreadful woman.’

‘Well, it’s been quite a while now and we did sort of suggest it was going to be an urgent action…’

‘Surely we can rope in some herb to do this. Christ. Sloven must have a range of external consultants who can step up for a few weeks. I mean it’s not real work. We just said we’d appoint someone. It doesn’t mean anything…’

‘Well it’s a bit awkward because social media makes this stuff transparent and, to be fair, it has been a few months now. And, er, the trust didn’t investigate hundreds of deaths.’

‘Don’t get sucked in, Jim Junior. A word of advice. If you want a career in this biz, question nothing. Keep your head down. Once you start to engage with patients and their families, you might as well give up. Just ignore them. They disappear. Or become so desperate, it’s easy to bat them away.

And another thing. Monitor won’t exist for much longer. NHS Improvement is the way forward. We are going to shine a beacon on poor practice.

Was there anything else you wanted?’

‘Sorry boss, but we’ve heard that BBC Breakfast are running a feature tomorrow morning. A pretty forthright piece asking what we’ve all done since the Mazars review was published.’
‘FFS.’
Tap tap tap.
‘Get old whatsi, you know… that other improvement director we’ve got. Alan whatsi. And get comms to put out a release. And hold it till end of play so it gets lost in Easter. Bloody pain in the arse stuff.’

[Text in bold added after Monitor announced the appointment of Alan Yates after 6pm the day before Easter weekend.]

A steal (of filthy lucre)…

Heard tonight, on the old grapevine (thank you grapevine) that Katrina Percy, Sloven CEO, was in Oxford last week. Shudder. Announcing the sale of Sloven Oxfordshire properties and the Slade House site where LB died. [Howl].

Sloven acquired, through a bit of a flaky process (reflections on the due diligence process here) the contract for providing services in Oxfordshire. A contract that apparently contained no clause around what happened to land/property if this organisation didn’t deliver and failed to improve services.Someone said to us, back in the day, that LB’s death and the subsequent shutting of STATT and John Sharich House on the Slade House site could allegedly make it easier to flog the site.

Apparently, when prescribed land/property use has failed for a two year year period, planning permission to do something different is a doddle. In effect, Oxfordshire Clinical Commissioning Group (OCCG) and Oxfordshire County Council (OCC) seem to have gifted premium land /properties to a bunch of ‘out of town cowboys’. Or, in current gameshow speak, Sloven have been given a steal (of filthy lucre).

Stupidity. Utter stupidity. Corruptness? Incompetence? Or all three. How could this possibly be?

An NHS Trust, swallowing up failing provision after a right royal roadshow;


<p><a href=”https://vimeo.com/38158627″>Katrina’s Ridgeway Message</a> from <a href=”https://vimeo.com/southernhealth”>Southern Health</a> on <a href=”https://vimeo.com”>Vimeo</a&gt;.</p>

“Superb, world class services” my arse. Evidence of failing to investigate hundreds of unexpected deaths across a four year period while merrily lining up the sale of prime land in a county 100 miles away from Sloven towers. Leeching much needed resources from Oxfordshire. Katrina Percy then  pitches up, around the two year anniversary of official failure, to announce the sale.

You are fucking kidding me?

We have strong local light shining gang which is something. My Life My Choice, our MP, Andrew Smith and the continued focus of BBC Oxford journalists. Andrew Smith wrote to OCC and OCCG in April 2013 expressing his concern about the obvious dip in staff morale after the Sloven take over of Ridgeway, and has remained deeply concerned at the potential sale of the site and loss of money to the county.

BBC Radio Oxford have been terrier like over this sordid tale, repeatedly airing the latest unfoldings and doing their best to hold Sloven and others to account. My Life My Choice met with the Sloven Board Chair, Mike Petter, and put some pretty hard hitting questions to him.

In answer to a question about the sale of Slade House, he answered:

“If it is sold by Southern Health, the money will go back into Learning Disability Services in Oxfordshire. If somebody else sells it, they might have a different idea.”

Bit of a funny answer about ‘someone else selling it’. But clearly stating Sloven will not be taking the money out of the county.

Earlier today I did a guest lecture for Oxford Brookes sociology students. I usually do a disability lecture (on their sociology of health and illness module). This year I was asked to talk about #JusticeforLB.

I rattled through Valuing People (2001), Valuing People Now (2008), Winterbourne View (2011), Winterbourne View Serious Case Review (2012) Transforming Care: a national response to Winterbourne View (2012), Confidential Inquiry into Premature Deaths of Learning Disabled People (March 2013) and Winterbourne View 2 years on (June 2013). All a complete and utter waste of resources. With pics of the kids at these key points.

grumpy (2)

2001

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2008

ryan5-147

2011

I then played The Tale of Laughing Boy.

There was a strangely eerie silence in the room. It happened in the Isle of Wight gig last week. And at the 12 Angry Women performance in Brighton the week before…

Pin drop stuff.

The students were engaged and got it. Sensible questions and bewilderment. I didn’t mention the Slade House site though. I stupidly believed Mike Petter.

The unmaking of a scandal and the dove from above

On December 10 2015, the scandalous findings of the Mazars review (into Sloven’s investigation practices when learning disability and mental health service user patients died unexpectedly) were leaked to the BBC. The headlines were horrific. 

Heidi Alexander tabled an urgent question in the House of Commons that morning and serious discussion followed. Deeply serious we thought at the time. A stack of MPs asked important and relevant questions.The full text of the session can be read here. Or you can watch it here.

The Mazars review was ‘profoundly shocking’. The stuff of scandal.

Heidi A nailed the central issue with this statement, love her:

The report raises broader questions about the care of people with learning disabilities or mental health problems. Just because some individuals have less ability to communicate concerns about their care, that must never mean that any less attention is paid to their treatment or their death. That would be the ultimate abrogation of responsibility, and one which should shame us all. The priority now must be to understand how this was allowed to happen, and to ensure this is put right so it can never happen again.

Unmaking the scandal

But the scandal was unmade. Over the course of a few weeks. Urgency dissipated and nothing happened. The Sloven CEO and Board remained untouched despite the report clearly laying the failings at their feet (and despite public appearances that still make my toes wince with awkwardness for just how crap they clearly are).

Why the scandal was unmade is a tricky one. How is a bit easier to unravel. First, there was the cracking timing of the eventual publication of the report. Just as MPs finished for the Christmas break. Literally. This built in a two week or so hiatus allowing some of the intensity of feeling around the findings to ease. This timing was, ostensibly the decision of NHS England. Though given the news this morning that Simon Stevens, NHS England CEO, was leant on by the government over NHS funding, it was quite possibly an order from above. The dove from above.

The dove from above may also explain the utterly unimpressive and ineffective  responses from NHS England, Monitor and the CQC. Giving a goldfish a knife and fork and expecting it to eat, type approaches. Worse than hopeless. Just pointless.

Having met Jeremy Hunt this year and listening to what he said carefully (a courtesy he didn’t extend to us), I re-read the Commons discussion from December this morning and realised how much he didn’t say. I think at the time we were so bowled over he’d sprung into action we didn’t pay proper attention to what he did say.

JezJezza laid out three steps ‘that will help create change in the culture we need’.

  1. Independently assured, Ofsted type style ratings of the quality of care offered to learning disabled people will be published for each of the 209 clinical commissioning group areas.
  2. NHS England have commissioned Bristol university to do an independent study into mortality rates of learning disabled people.
  3. Bruce Keogh will develop a methodology to publishing the number of avoidable deaths per trust. Central to that will be establishing a no-blame reporting culture across the NHS, with people being rewarded, not penalised, for speaking openly and transparently about mistakes.

Not sure where 1. came from but 2. and 3. were already underway before the Mazars findings were circulated. So not a big response by the Secretary of State. The Bristol review stuff is a bit of a waste of time because it’s underfunded and stripped back to the bare bones of research (though I’ve no doubt the team are doing the best job they can within these confines).

In the thirty minute question and answer session that followed this opening statement Jezza repeated human factor speak over and over again. Pretty much ignoring the implications of the review. He only mentioned learning disabled people once. Many of his responses (see below) to various MPs were irrelevant to the Mazars findings given there was no blame culture. No investigations. Nobody cared. People were expected to die early and when they did it was natural causes. No questions asked.

We have to move away from a blame culture in the NHS to a culture in which doctors and nurses are supported if they speak out, which too often is not the case. (to Heidi Alexander)

The hon. Lady has been a practising clinician, so I am sure she will understand that at the heart of this issue is the need to get the culture right. (to Dr Philippa Whitford)

There is an interesting comparison with the airline industry: when it investigate accidents, the vast majority of times, those investigations point to systemic failure. When the NHS investigates clinical accidents, the vast majority of times we point to individual failure. (to Jeremy Lefroy)

I do not see the treatment of people with learning difficulties as distinct from the broader lessons in the Francis report, but if we fail to make progress, I know that the right hon. Gentleman will come back to me, and rightly so. (to Norman Lamb)

I also think, however, that there is a systemic issue in relation to the low reporting of avoidable and preventable deaths and harm, and the failure to develop a true learning culture in the NHS, which in the end is what doctors, nurses and patients all want and need. (to Caroline Nokes)

..if we are going to improve the reporting culture, which in the end is what the report is about, we have to change the fear that many doctors and nurses have that if they are open and transparent about mistakes they have made or seen, they will get dumped on. That is a real worry for many people. Part of this is about creating a supportive culture, so that when people take the brave decision to be open about something that has gone wrong they get the support that they deserve. (to Cheryl Gillan)

When there is a problem, we need a culture where the NHS is totally open and as keen as the families are themselves to understand what happened, whether it could be avoided, and what lessons can be learned. (to Diana Johnson)

We have to recognise that everyone is human, but, uniquely, doctors are in a profession where when they make mistakes, as we all do in our own worlds, people sometimes die. The result of that should not automatically be to say that the doctor was clinically negligent. Ninety-nine times out of 100, we should deduce from the mistake what can be learned to avoid it happening in future. Of course, where there is gross negligence, due process should take its course, but that is only on a minority of occasions. (to Bob Blackman)

He is right about making sure that we get the culture right. It is about creating a more supportive environment for people who do a very, very tough job every day of the week. (to Barry Sheerman)

We need a culture where, when people raise concerns, they are confident they will be listened to. (to Jim Cunningham)

Jezza’s performance was simply a warm up to his recent patient safety global summit gig. Astonishing really. And how he could host a global patient safety summit, bigging up NHS efforts in this arena while ignoring the thorny issue of a group of people consistently dying prematurely in NHS care, without question, without blame and without learning is extraordinary.

But patients aren’t equal of course. Even in the NHS. There’s consistent evidence for this. And some people aren’t really patients.

When we met Jezza he steadfastly refused to engage with or acknowledge that, given the Mazars review revealed that less than 1%* of the deaths of learning disabled people were investigated, urgent scrutiny was needed to look at what was happening and how this was allowed to happen. He repeated human factor stuff. Stepford wife styley.

[*The two deaths that were investigated were LB and, from local intelligence, another patient in the same unit who died a week or so after him so the figure could easily have been 0. 0. 0. 0. 0… 0… ]

Such wilful stubbornness (with sprinklings of stupidity and arrogance) has (ironically) probably consigned a very rare window for proper scrutiny and focus to be turned onto a group of people who die early back to blackout. 

Why? Why has this been allowed to happen? The most scandalous report in the history of learning disability history kicked into the long grass? I dunno. Here’s a few suggestions. A bit of an overlapping jumble as it’s difficult to tease this stuff out.

  1. The extent of eugenic practices that occur under the ‘watchful eye’ of NHS/social care is too big to go near.
  2. Uncovering such practices is feared a) morally (way too uncomfortable and messy to go near); b) economically (potential litigation costs relating to the uncovering of further scandalous practices together with the cost of budgets associated with longer living people are too high).
  3. Premature deaths are ok really or even welcomed because a) certain people ain’t fully human b) are costly, burdensome and unproductive c) the old ‘better off dead’/lives unworthy of life type arguments.
  4. People in positions who can do something about this, and there are some bloody brilliant people who are doing their best, are obstructed from doing their jobs.
  5. Jeremy Hunt sees the HF thing as a calling and has got a bit of a chunky god complex going on. The Mazars review is a pesky complication best ignored.

The dove from above factor.

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Wight, wrong and mateyness

image (24)I went to the Isle of Wight Adult Safeguarding Board conference this week. Going to speak, meet, or be part of an event, as ‘LB’s mum’ or part of #JusticeforLB tends to be fascinating, depressing or a waste of bloody time. We’ve sort of learned, in the Justice Shed, that these things are typically about pomp and performance (and box ticking). Not substance. The Isle of Wight invite seemed different, the ‘invitee’ clearly seemed to get it and I went.

Graham Enderby kicked off the day. Talking about Harry and ‘the Bournewood Case‘. A remarkable story of (family generated) tenacity, guts and integrity. And wrongness. Leading to ground breaking changes. His story featured an early appearance by one of our favourite barristers. Human rights in action. Simple as. Graham socked it to the audience of 200 or so, health, social care and police bods, housed for the day in an enormous boathouse on the Cowes waterfront. Without artifice, excuse or fudging. The following speakers similarly demonstrated integrity by the bucketful. It was uncomfortable at times. Informative. And reassuring that professionals got it and were prepared to step up and say what needed to be said.

My bit was towards the end. Before showing The Tale of Laughing Boy I carelessly asked how many people had heard about LB or #JusticeforLB. I felt almost apologetic playing the film to such an audience a spit from the home of Sloven. They must have had a constant diet of LB, #JusticeforLB and the Mazars review for months now…

Less than half (easily) of the room put their hands up. One of those cartoon screechy brake moments. Really?

Re-watching the film, made this time last year, was a further bash in the chops. The naivety around the ‘reaching for the stars’ stuff. Back in the day. Pre inquest. Pre Mazars publication. Pre every other atrocity that has happened or continues to happen. In full view.

The lack of response to the Mazars review is scandalous. Jezza Hunt and his merry band of human factor/HSIB peeps are, at best, naive to believe, not care, (or just argue) that creating ‘safe spaces’ and a no blame culture within the NHS will lead to a reduction in the premature deaths of learning disabled people. This is simply absurd. And closes down any scrutiny of the systematic erasure of the lives of people who are clearly perceived to be expendable and burdensome within the NHS (and social care).

I was surprised by how people responded to the film/talk… Genuine distress, discomfort and talking about what action to take. I shouldn’t have been surprised. That low bar kicking in again. This is exactly how people should respond to hearing what happened to LB and the unfolding of events since. Something Jezza, NHS England, Monitor and the CQC have systematically tried to stifle.

I caught the ferry back with Graham. We shared stories, horror, outrage, atrocities and chuckles.

I wish there was similar openness, recognition and engagement from Jezza, CQC, Monitor and NHS England to what is now a clearly documented, evidenced and consistent happening. But what’s a few (hundred/thousand) learning disabled lives between mates?

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Mencrap and block

Neil Crowther wrote a post this week in response to the picture of someone buried beneath shopping in a shitty doorway while their Mencrap support worker smoked a fag and chatted on the phone. Among the points he raised was the inappropriateness of Mencrap’s response to this happening. Distancing themselves from what happened, talking instead about “a photo on social media”. At the end of the post he raised a sensible set of questions.

The CEO, Jan Tregelles, responded to his post with an overnight blocking spree. Carnage among #JusticeforLB campaigners.

Dusting ourselves off this morning, we’re not left wondering where the voice of learning disability went so wrong.

 

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