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Thursday, April 24, 2025

Councillor says ‘lessons must be learned’ after number of in-patients who took their own lives at NHS trust revealed

A Nottingham councillor believes an NHS trust has shown a lack of accountability after new figures revealed more than 200 people under its care took their own lives over the last seven years.

Figures published in response to a Freedom of Information request in November show there have been 211 ‘self-inflicted’ deaths of people under the care of the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust since 2018.

This includes 11 inpatients being cared for by the trust at inpatient settings.

Cllr Georgia Power (Lab), who chairs Nottingham City Council’s Health Scrutiny Committee, said the number of deaths was “significant”.

She said:

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“We know in Nottingham there is a significant issue with people not being able to access care, so [this figure] won’t include people that are not under their care that have tried to get help.

“There were 11 people who died in the trust’s hospitals, which are supposed to be a place of safety – but it was not safe for them.

“There has never really been any accountability for it. I don’t mean accountability in that someone individually should be held to account, but the system.

“They have never spoken about anything like this and what they are going to do to make sure it doesn’t keep happening.”

Cllr Power has been chairing meetings – during which NHS trusts and other health bodies are scrutinised – for a number of years.

She said she had been left wondering why the deaths had not been featured in any of the trust’s board papers.

The trust told says it had recently started to include details on such deaths in its ‘Learning from Deaths Quarterly Report’, which was introduced to board papers in the second quarter of last year.

“What the figures don’t show, and I will ask this when they come in the summer.  What were the lessons learned from those deaths?” Cllr Power added.

“I am sure there are people where [the trust] couldn’t have done any more, but there will be people who have asked for help and didn’t get it.

“What learning has been done? You’d hope it has been done internally, but there has been no accountability and no way of knowing what they have learned from it.

“These are just numbers. They don’t tell you anything behind it. Where is the learning, what patterns have they noticed?”

Responding to the concerns, the trust said it is currently enacting an improvement programme to improve patient safety and care.

Ifti Majid, chief executive of the trust, said: “Any loss of life is a tragedy and on behalf of the Trust, I once again extend our condolences to all those impacted. 

“We cannot comment on individual cases due to patient confidentiality, but in the case of any serious incident we will identify any areas for learning and where improvements can be made.

“Patient safety is our priority and we are currently completing a comprehensive integrated improvement programme at the Trust to further improve our care and safety for patients and our local communities.”

 

A spokesperson said its improvement plan includes reviews and changes to family involvement in patient care, risk assessment, safety and crisis planning, communication with other agencies, care planning, physical healthcare, patient observations on wards, seclusion practices, medicines management and the management of ingested items.

The trust will soon be at the centre of a judge-led public inquiry, ordered by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, looking into the June 2023 attacks in Nottingham.

 

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