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Bereaved parents face ‘harrowing’ delays for NHS postmorterms

about 19 hours ago
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Bereaved parents are enduring “harrowing” delays of more than a year to find out why their child died because the NHS has too few specialist doctors to perform postmortems.The shortage of paediatric and perinatal pathologists is revealed in a report by the Royal College of Pathologists published on Sunday.It warns that the situation is “dire”, services in some parts of the UK have “totally collapsed” and families are paying the price.The NHS has so few of those doctors that in some regions the bodies of babies and children who have died have to be taken elsewhere for examination, for example from Northern Ireland to Alder Hey children’s hospital in Liverpool, the college says.“Our service is in crisis”, said Dr Clair Evans, the chair of the college’s advisory committee that represents pathologists who specialise in the care of under-18s.

“This is having a significant and distressing effect on families who regularly report long and harrowing waits for postmortem results,“One in five families are now waiting six months or more, and some longer than 12 months,There are simply not enough consultants to undertake this work and families are suffering,”For example, the BBC reported in July on the case of Katie Louise Llewellyn and her partner, Aled Wyn Jones, from Carmarthenshire, who were still waiting to hear why their three-year-old son Tomos had died unexpectedly 13 months earlier while they were on holiday in June,Wales has just two consultant paediatric and perinatal pathologists.

There are none working in Northern Ireland or in the south-west or Midlands in England, according to a workforce audit published by the college.As a result, families can “experience unacceptable delays when waiting for test results” that reveal why their child died.“Bereaved families are facing a major increase in waiting time – or transfer out of their region – for postmortem examination of their babies and children”, the report adds.Postmortems “can help parents in the process of closure and give information that aids treatment in subsequent pregnancies”.The college found that:37% of consultant posts in the UK are lying vacant.

The UK has just 52 paediatric and perinatal consultants and 13 are due to retire in the next five years.Just 3% of consultants think current staffing levels are enough to sustain their service.Only 13 resident doctors are in training to become consultants in the specialty.Dr Clea Harmer, the chief executive of the baby loss charity Sands, said the report “adds to the growing evidence that workforce shortages are causing unacceptable and heartbreaking delays for bereaved parents in getting postmortem results”.She said: “At Sands, we hear regularly about the devastating impact of the lengthy delays on parents, who are left in limbo, waiting for answers and for vital information they need to plan their futures.

”Ministers and NHS bosses need to do more to “close the agonising gap between a baby dying and parents finding out why it happened”, Harmer said.As well as performing postmortems, paediatric and perinatal pathologists help to diagnose and treat sick children, including conditions that lead to other relatives being screened for it.A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “Bereaved parents have experienced the unthinkable and any avoidable distress to families in this heartbreaking position is unacceptable.“There are a record number of doctors across almost every speciality in the NHS, including pathology, and our 10-year health plan commits to the creation of 1,000 new speciality training posts, with a focus on specialties where there is greatest need.”
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Budget 2025: how inflation and the two-child benefit cap has increased poverty

“I’ve sat and cried many times, feeling like I’ve let my kids down,” is the heartbreaking description one Kent mother gives of the difficulty she has meeting her family’s needs.With four children still under 13, the family live in a rented flat in the town of Herne Bay on the county’s north coast. She does not come to the door, but her partner passes a handwritten note relaying their meagre existence on benefits as the Guardian joins the local food bank’s morning delivery round.“I have to be careful with electric and gas, and food has to be £1 frozen food,” she writes. “Snacks are a very rare treat

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Bereaved parents face ‘harrowing’ delays for NHS postmorterms

Bereaved parents are enduring “harrowing” delays of more than a year to find out why their child died because the NHS has too few specialist doctors to perform postmortems.The shortage of paediatric and perinatal pathologists is revealed in a report by the Royal College of Pathologists published on Sunday. It warns that the situation is “dire”, services in some parts of the UK have “totally collapsed” and families are paying the price.The NHS has so few of those doctors that in some regions the bodies of babies and children who have died have to be taken elsewhere for examination, for example from Northern Ireland to Alder Hey children’s hospital in Liverpool, the college says.“Our service is in crisis”, said Dr Clair Evans, the chair of the college’s advisory committee that represents pathologists who specialise in the care of under-18s

about 19 hours ago
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‘We’ve got to find answers’: Corby families affected by cancer searching for truth about toxic waste sites

Alison Gaffney and Andy Hinde received the devastating news that their 17-month-old son, Fraser, had a rare type of leukaemia in 2018.Two years of gruelling treatment followed, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy and immunotherapy, before a stem cell transplant. Fraser, then aged three, made a “miraculous recovery” from the surgery, before doctors declared the cancer in remission.It was at this point, as Fraser started to recover and grow stronger, that Gaffney, 36, began to look for answers. She could not stop thinking about comments made by hospital staff at the time of her son’s diagnosis

1 day ago
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UK gambling firms spent ‘astronomic’ £2bn on advertising last year

British gambling companies spent an “astronomic” £2bn on advertising and marketing last year, according to a new estimate that has intensified calls for the chancellor to increase taxes on the sector.Bookmakers, online casinos and slot machine companies spent the sum through a mixture of print and digital promotions, as well as affiliate programmes, where third parties are paid to steer gamblers towards particular operators in return for a fee.The figure, produced by the leading media insights group WARC, far outstrips the £1.2bn that the Treasury collected last year from online casino companies.Media industry sources said the total spent on gambling advertising is likely to be hundreds of millions of pounds higher because it is difficult to accurately measure the actual amount of digital marketing spend

1 day ago
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South Africa declares gender-based violence a national disaster amid G20 protests

Hundreds of women gathered in cities across South Africa on Friday to protest against gender-based violence in the country before the G20 summit in Johannesburg this weekend.Demonstrators turned out in 15 locations – including Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town and Durban – wearing black as a sign of “mourning and resistance”.They staged a peaceful 15-minute silent lie-down protest, symbolising the 15 lives lost daily to gender-based violence in the country.South Africa has one of the world’s highest femicide rates, with UN Women estimating that it is five times higher than the global average.Called the G20 Women’s Shutdown, it was organised by the NGO Women For Change, which urged women and LGBTQ+ communities to “refrain from all paid and unpaid work in workplaces, universities and homes, and to spend no money for the entire day to demonstrate the economic and social impact of their absence”

2 days ago
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Dangerous shortage of medics threatens safe patient care in England, top GP says

GPs can no longer guarantee safe care for millions of patients because of a dangerous shortage of medics, Britain’s top family doctor has said.Prof Kamila Hawthorne, the chair of the Royal College of GPs (RCGP), said surgeries were desperate to hire more doctors to meet soaring demand for care but could not afford to do so because of a lack of core funding.Exhausted family doctors have been working “completely unsafe hours” because their surgeries did not have the cash to recruit new staff or replace those quitting, increasing the risk of serious errors or deadly conditions being missed, she said.“GPs will always push themselves to do what’s best for our patients, but we can’t go on like this,” Hawthorne said. “GP workload pressures are so pronounced that many of our members are telling us they are worried they can’t guarantee safe care when there aren’t enough GPs to keep up

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