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NHS patients put at risk by ‘sham investigations’, says ex-CEO of hospital

1 day ago
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Patients are being put at risk by NHS bosses launching “sham investigations” into whistleblowers to shut down concerns, a former hospital chief executive who won a £1.4m bullying claim has said.Dr Susan Gilby took over as chief executive at the Countess of Chester hospital in 2018 after it was rocked by the Lucy Letby case.She was awarded the payout – one of the biggest in NHS history – last month after a tribunal ruled she had been unfairly dismissed after raising concerns about alleged bullying and harassment by the chair of the hospital board.An employment judge found that board members of the hospital conspired to unfairly exclude her and deleted documents when she launched legal action.

Speaking to the Guardian, Gilby said she had been “traumatised” by the experience and made to feel like a “pariah in the NHS” for refusing to drop her concerns in return for a “non-job”.“I feel desperately saddened that my NHS career has come to an end in the way it has.It’s had a really deep psychological impact [and] probably taken at least 10 years of working life away from me,” she said.“It’s been very isolating.People walk away when they realise you’re not willing to play by the NHS playbook and accept the offer to get you out of the situation.

Doing that has resulted in being made to feel that I’m a pariah in the NHS.”The tribunal found that Ian Haythornthwaite, the chair of the Countess of Chester hospital NHS foundation trust, worked with three other senior figures to “engineer her dismissal” after Gilby raised a whistleblowing complaint about his “bullying and harassment”.Haythornthwaite, who resigned after the tribunal ruling, was described by the employment judge Dawn Shotter as an “inaccurate historian” who did not give credible testimony.Shotter also criticised the reliability of the three others – Ros Fallon, Ken Gill and Nicola Price – who were found to have conspired with Haythornthwaite to build a “sham case” against Gilby to force her out.Haythornthwaite, a former BBC executive, was judged to have worked with others to delete scores of documents, including private emails and WhatsApp messages, despite being legally obliged to retain them for the employment proceedings.

Shotter described this as a “deliberate intention to hide documents” that would have exposed “the true part” played by him.A barrister for the Countess of Chester hospital told the tribunal there was no intention to deceive.However, the tribunal rejected this claim as being without “any validity given the extent of [their] failure to disclose”.Gilby, a consultant in intensive care and anaesthesia, was suspended on full pay at the hospital in 2022, shortly after making a protected disclosure about Haythornthwaite’s “unacceptable and bullying” behaviour.She said she and her legal team were now exploring whether to make a criminal complaint against Haythornthwaite after the tribunal’s findings.

One of the offences being considered as the basis for a possible complaint is alleged misfeasance in public office, in which a senior figure has knowingly misused or abused their power.Haythornthwaite told the Guardian he denied any allegation of criminal wrongdoing and said he would not comment on “unspecified allegations by unspecified people”.He rejects the claim that his behaviour was “unacceptable and bullying” and contests the tribunal’s finding that his evidence was not credible, and that he deliberately hid documents.Gilby told the tribunal she was offered a “non-job” with NHS England if she dropped her complaints, which she refused to do, which is when the trust’s chair launched a misconduct investigation into her.She said: “Sham investigations appear to be increasingly and frequently used as a way of manipulating somebody out of an organisation or closing down concerns inappropriately.

I think it is a very common problem across the NHS,I wouldn’t say it’s endemic but it’s happening too often and it’s incredibly harmful,”Gilby is now calling for new regulations for senior NHS managers from non-clinical backgrounds, as well as a legally binding framework for how they operate,The NHS has been criticised repeatedly for the way leaders deal with whistleblowing complaints,Gilby said she had been contacted by numerous health bosses since her tribunal who had been forced out in a similar way.

“It’s not just one bad apple – absolutely not,” she said.“I genuinely believe that on the whole there are very many people doing the right thing across the NHS.But unfortunately [these issues] repeat year on year, but not many people have got the resources or the resilience to see it through.“I therefore do feel that something needs to be done that will ensure that people think twice before they choose to use their organisation and resources to wage personal vendettas.”Gilby said the protections for NHS whistleblowers did not go far enough, leaving medics afraid to raise concerns and potentially putting patients at risk.

“Patient safety incidents will go unnoticed and unreported and there will be no learning,” she said,“We see that time and time again,I was acutely aware of how poor culture and behaviour at the very top can impact patient safety,That’s why I was so adamant that I wasn’t going to walk away,”A spokesperson for the Countess of Chester hospital NHS foundation trust said: “We acknowledge the tribunal’s decision regarding the failures of the trust in this case.

We remain focused on learning from the findings and continuing to support our staff and patients.As this matter has now concluded, we will not be commenting further.”
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FTSE 100 ends day at closing high after gold and silver fell in ‘metals meltdown’ – as it happened

Oof! Britain’s stock market has now shrugged off its earlier worries, and hit a new alltime high.With the slump in metal prices easing, the FTSE 100 has bounded ahead to hit a fresh record peak of 10,298 points, up 0.7% today.Mining companies have recovered most of their earlier losses, helped by a moderate recovery in precious metal prices after their tumble early this morning.And finally…

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UK manufacturing growth accelerates as export orders rise

British manufacturers enjoyed one of their best months since Labour came to power in January, according to a closely watched survey, adding to signs that the Bank of England will decide to keep interest rates on hold this week.The purchasing managers’ index (PMI), which measures activity in the private manufacturing sector, rose to 51.8 in January from 50.6 in December, the best reading since August 2024. Any reading above 50 represents growth

about 12 hours ago
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Viral AI personal assistant seen as step change – but experts warn of risks

A new viral AI personal assistant will handle your email inbox, trade away your entire stock portfolio and text your wife “good morning” and “goodnight” on your behalf.OpenClaw, formerly known as Moltbot, and before that known as Clawdbot (until the AI firm Anthropic requested it rebrand due to similarities with its own product Claude), bills itself as “the AI that actually does things”: a personal assistant that takes instructions via messaging apps such as WhatsApp or Telegram.Developed last November, it now has nearly 600,000 downloads and has gone viral among a niche ecosystem of the AI obsessed who say it represents a step change in the capabilities of AI agents, or even an “AGI moment” – that is, a revelation of generally intelligent AI.“It only does exactly what you tell it to do and exactly what you give it access to,” said Ben Yorke, who works with the AI vibe trading platform Starchild and recently allowed the bot to delete, he claims, 75,000 of his old emails while he was in the shower. “But a lot of people, they’re exploring its capabilities

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What is Moltbook? The strange new social media site for AI bots

On social media, people often accuse each other of being bots, but what happens when an entire social network is designed for AI agents to use? Moltbook is a site where the AI agents – bots built by humans – can post and interact with each other. It is designed to look like Reddit, with subreddits on different topics and upvoting. On 2 February the platform stated it had more than 1.5m AI agents signed up to the service. Humans are allowed, but only as observers

about 21 hours ago
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Pakistan boycott shows growing divide between cricket’s commercial needs and political reality | Taha Hashim

The announcement on Sunday, fittingly, was made by Pakistan’s government, a reminder that this episode goes well beyond a game of cricket. In a post on X, the government approved the national side’s participation at this month’s T20 World Cup, but with a significant caveat.“The Pakistan cricket team shall not take the field in the match scheduled on 15 February 2026 against India,” read the statement. The disintegration of this global tournament continues, that one line prompting serious concern for the sport’s economy. No further explanation was provided

about 8 hours ago
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Steve Borthwick asks for England fans’ roar in support of grieving Maro Itoje

Steve Borthwick has called on England supporters to give Maro Itoje “the roar he deserves” when he comes off the bench in his side’s Six Nations opener against Wales on Saturday.Borthwick has taken the decision to omit Itoje from the starting lineup after his captain missed the start of England’s training camp in Girona to attend his mother’s funeral in Nigeria. Jamie George assumes the role of which he was stripped when Itoje was handed the captaincy 12 months ago, while Borthwick has handed a first start since the 2023 World Cup to the in-form winger Henry Arundell and selected Tommy Freeman at outside centre.Itoje has played every minute of England’s past six Six Nations campaigns and has been used as a replacement only three times in his 97 appearances. His record in the Six Nations is all the more remarkable and the only other time he has been used as a replacement was on his debut in 2016, going on to start 44 of the next 48 matches after missing four in 2019 because of injury

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Can Peter Mandelson be stripped of his peerage over Epstein links?

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Mandelson should no longer be a peer, says Starmer

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Mandelson resigns from Labour to prevent ‘further embarrassment’ over Epstein links

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UK should consider resuming talks on EU defence pact, Starmer says

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Lord Wallace of Tankerness obituary

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