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Saturday, April 25, 2026

Lucy Letby whistleblower: ‘Babies would have survived if hospital had acted sooner’ - The Guardian

Exclusive: Dr Stephen Brearey accuses Countess of Chester trust of failing to properly address concerns about nurse who killed babies

Babies would have survived if hospital executives had acted earlier on concerns about the nurse Lucy Letby, a senior doctor who raised the alarm has said.

In an exclusive Guardian interview, Dr Stephen Brearey accused the Countess of Chester hospital trust of being “negligent” and failing to properly address concerns he and other doctors raised about Letby as she carried out her killings.

Brearey was the first to alert a hospital executive to the fact that Letby was present at unusual deaths and collapses of babies in June 2015.

The paediatrician and his consultant colleagues raised concerns multiple times over months before Letby, then 26, was finally removed from the neonatal unit in July 2016. The police were contacted almost a year later, in May 2017.

Speaking publicly for the first time, Brearey told the Guardian executives should have contacted the police in February 2016 when he escalated concerns about Letby and asked for an urgent meeting.

Instead, he said, nothing was done other than to arrange another meeting three months later. “Discussing with police at that stage would seem to be a sensible action to take. If that had happened, it’s reasonable to conclude that [two] triplets, Child O and Child P, would be alive today,” he said.

Brearey was the lead clinician in the Chester hospital’s neonatal unit, where Letby murdered seven...



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