Thursday, 16 April 2009

Secret filming nurse struck off

A nurse who secretly filmed for the BBC to reveal the neglect of elderly
patients at a hospital has been struck off for misconduct.

Margaret Haywood, 58, filmed at the Royal Sussex Hospital in Brighton
for a BBC Panorama programme in July 2005.

She was struck off by the Nursing and Midwifery Council on Thursday
after being a nurse for more than 20 years.

The panel said she "followed the behest of the filmmakers... rather than
her obligations as a nurse".

Ms Haywood, of Liverpool, said: "I was convinced that it was the right
thing to do at the time as, in fact, I had reported the issues and
nothing had been done.

"I felt I owed it to the people on the ward."

She was found guilty of misconduct on Wednesday following a fitness to
practise hearing.
“ Panorama believes that Margaret Haywood has done the elderly
population of this country a great service ”
BBC spokesman

The chair of the panel, Linda Read, said Ms Haywood had prioritised the
filming and did not fulfil her obligations as a nurse.

"In the view of the panel, this was a major breach of the code of
conduct.

"A patient should be able to trust a nurse with his/her physical
condition and psychological wellbeing without that confidential
information being disclosed to others.

"Although the conditions on the ward were dreadful, it was not necessary
to breach confidentiality to seek to improve them by the method chosen.

She said the misconduct was "fundamentally incompatible with being a
nurse".

"The registrant embarked upon filming many vulnerable, elderly patients
in the last stages of their lives, knowing that it was unlikely that
they would be able to give any meaningful consent to that process, in
circumstances where their dignity was most compromised.

"The registrant could have attempted to address shortcomings by other
means. But this was never a course of action which she fully
considered."

'Patients' dignity compromised'

Ms Haywood had admitted breaching patient confidentiality but denied her
fitness to practise had been impaired.

Elizabeth Bloor, the BBC programme's producer, told the hearing there
had been "an over-arching public interest" to produce the Undercover
Nurse documentary because Panorama had received up to 5,000 complaints
about conditions.

She also said that questions had been asked in the House of Commons
about the issues investigated, and the Royal College of Nursing
conducted research into patient dignity on hospital wards in the wake of
its broadcast.
“ This makes total nonsense of all the talk about openness and
transparency in the NHS. Cover-up is the order of the game ”
Joyce Robins, Patient Concern

In November the panel found no evidence that Ms Haywood broke the NHS
Trust's policy on whistle-blowing by raising concerns about patient care
in the documentary, or that she failed to assist colleagues when a
patient was having a seizure.

A BBC spokesman said: "There was clearly a strong public interest in
revealing that some elderly people were not receiving the level of care
we expect from our national health service.

"Panorama believes that Margaret Haywood has done the elderly population
of this country a great service."

'Right and proper'

The decision was criticised by Joyce Robins, co-director of Patient
Concern.

She said: "This just demonstrates the priorities of the regulators -
rules come before patients every time. The message that goes out to
nurses is: however badly you see patients treated, keep your face shut.

"This makes total nonsense of all the talk about openness and
transparency in the NHS. Cover-up is the order of the game."

Ms Haywood's actions were also defended by Gary Fitzgerald, chief
executive of Action on Elder Abuse.

He said: "We know that we're seeing older people suffering the most
appalling care and neglect too often in our care environments.

"In that context I believe what Margaret Haywood did and what Panorama
did was right and proper.

"She said the public needs to be aware of what exactly's going on in
these places, in these wards, we didn't have any other way of telling
them and I think that's the point".

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/england/sussex/8002559.stm

Published: 2009/04/16 15:35:57 GMT