Maxwell Mclean says his treatment made ‘an absolute mockery of the freedom to speak up’ in the NHS
Patient safety is at risk without better protection for NHS whistleblowers, according to a former health service chair who claims he was forced from his job after raising concerns about reviews into preventable baby deaths.
Maxwell Mclean, the former chair of the Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS foundation trust, said his treatment made “an absolute mockery of the freedom to speak up” in the NHS.
“This isn’t just about me. This kind of failure to be held to account is a danger to our community,” said Mclean. “It is genuinely in the public interest that a chair is supported when they try to hold a trust’s CEO to account. Because the consequence if they don’t is a danger to patient safety.”
Mclean claims he raised a number of “alarming” issues at the trust, including significant delays investigating neonatal deaths and the neglect of a staff member who was formally reported to be at risk of suicide.
This led to an independent investigation that corroborated some of his concerns. Mclean claimed that shortly after this review was completed he was forced to resign by the trust’s other board members. He is pursuing a whistleblowing claim at an employment tribunal in Leeds later this month.
“My contract was unlawfully terminated by a board that should not have met and did so in secret, so it was entirely against the constitution. And they were doing it in order to cover up very...
Read Full Story:
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMi5wFBVV95cUxPcGtUeHU4dmZCZ1RPUFBQUjVl...