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Legal victory for doctor who aired safety fears: Tribunal rules that sacking by hospital was unjustified: Trust spent pounds 6m in effort to discredit cardiologist
[April 18, 2014]

Legal victory for doctor who aired safety fears: Tribunal rules that sacking by hospital was unjustified: Trust spent pounds 6m in effort to discredit cardiologist


(Guardian (UK) Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) A whistleblowing heart doctor who sounded the alarm about poor care and patient deaths at his own hospital has won a major legal victory against his NHS employers, whose attempts to pursue ultimately unsubstantiated allegations against him cost pounds 6m of public money.



An employment tribunal has ruled that Dr Raj Mattu was unfairly dismissed by the Walsgrave hospital in Coventry, and suffered a series of "detriments" after he spoke out about what he saw as dangerous conditions, including too many patients' beds being squeezed together to help relieve overcrowding.

Mattu was sacked by University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust in 2010, nine years after he first aired his concerns publicly about what he said was dangerous post-operative care. He highlighted a series of worries about patient safety, including the cases of two patients who died in crowded bays.


He voiced alarm at the hospital's "five-in-four" policy, under which - to save money - an extra fifth bed was placed in a bay intended for only four patients. The Commission for Health Improvement, the then NHS watchdog, condemned the practice and criticised the hospital, which it said had a much higher death rate than should have been expected.

An employment tribunal sitting in Birmingham under Judge Hughes ruled this week that 54-year-old Mattu had been unfairly dismissed and would receive compensation, which will be decided later.

It described him as blameless, saying: "The claimant did not cause or contribute to his dismissal." The trust ran up over pounds 6m in legal fees in its long quest against Mattu, which he said was a campaign of vilification designed to discredit him for no reason. The General Medical Council decided not to proceed to an inquiry after looking into more than 200 allegations the trust made against him. It also hired private detectives to investigate the cardiologist and a public relations agency to handle media interest in the long-running case, which saw Mattu receive significant support from his medical colleagues.

Mattu had been "vilified, bullied and harassed out of a job he loved", the doctor's lawyer claimed. "This has been a David v Goliath legal battle, which I am delighted to have won for my client," said his solicitor, Stephen Moore.

In a statement, the trust said it was "disappointed by the employment tribunal's decision that the dismissal of Dr Mattu was unfair, given that the procedure followed by the trust was reviewed by the court of appeal in March 2012, when it found in the Trust's favour".

It added: "As a trust, we will continue to support all our staff to raise issues of concern in our effort to provide continuous improvement in our services to patients." In his inaugural speech as the new chief executive of NHS England earlier this month, Simon Stevens said that, while every whistleblower would not always be right, "the fact is, patients' lives are saved when courageous people speak up - openly and honestly - and when each of us takes personal accountability for putting things right." The coalition has moved to stop NHS organisations from victimising whistleblowers after a number of cases came to light involving alleged harassment and silencing of staff who spoke out about poor care or patient safety, such as over the case of Baby P, Peter Connolly. Health secretary Jeremy Hunt has ordered all trusts to be open and transparent and take whistleblowers' claims seriously.

(c) 2014 Guardian Newspapers Limited.

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