I am a Bethlem &Maudsley trained (1982) LD challenging
behaviour nurse therapist with nearly forty years experience and nearing
retirement. Following years of managing and working as a nurse behaviour therapist
in both NHS and private challenging behaviour services I took the post of staff
nurse within TEWV NHS forensic LD service in January 2010 having moved to the north
east for personal reasons and in anticipation of imminent retirement. I was particularly
interested to experience at ground level a forensic LD service.
Although Roseberry Park hospital, part of TEWV NHS Trusts
forensic services is an impressive new chromium and glass building, many employees
view its operational culture as transplanted directly from the old St Luke’s
asylum that it replaced.
I was employed by TEWV NHS Trust from January 2010 until my dismissal
in March 2012. During this time I only actually worked for ten months during
which I made many complaints involving various practices and was aware via
participant observations of unkindness and incompetence on the part of various
staff including two modern matrons and was aware of abusive behaviours and reputations
of others. Moreover, abusive episodes of extended seclusions including a
completely calm girl secluded on the 13.9.10 for nearly four hours. We puzzled for
some time trying to understand the purpose of such an event but could only conclude
that it might have been something like enabling staff to take tea breaks.
Another small female was secluded a month earlier (2.9.10) for
over eight hours following incompetent, overzealous and insensitive handling on
the part of a modern matron. Despite having calmed for most of the afternoon the
girl was finally seen by the senior consultant who had hours earlier ordered the
seclusion and who finally visited and ordered the administration of a powerful intramuscular
tranquiliser resulting in her having to be helped from the room and unable to
rake a call from her mother.
These and the other matters complained about eventually resulted
in two internal inquiries (April 2011 and January 2012) and the acknowledged
permanent changes to Trust practices according to the Social Services
Safeguarding team and the active support of Cleveland police.
Following the first inquiry in early 2011 a second commenced (Seclusion
Review) as a consequence of my rejection of the first because it completely failed
to address the seclusion complaints. My appeal against the first inquiry
findings, in line with Trust policy was to the Trust CEO Martin Barkley and HR
Director David Levey in August 2011 resulting in the Seclusion Review, published
in December 2011.
The Seclusion Review was undertaken by the most senior
clinical and specialist practitioners within the forensic service but
unfortunately coordinated by the very consultant who had ordered the eight hour
seclusion. One of the other two senior practitioner investigators had also already
heard my complaints at the time but had ignored them.
The Seclusion Review report represented a cover-up by failing
to address specific complaints about the two particular seclusion episodes (2.9.10
and 12.10.10) by looking at only the ten previous episodes a year later that chronologically
fell well short of the two episodes originally complained about.
Had an independent external specialist considered the ten “examined”
episodes then they probably would also have been found to contain elements of
concern as well.
The Seclusion Review merely declared a single minor error of paperwork
in its findings, also the Chief Executive in his Trust Annual Review of 2011/12
declared that CQC interest during the year had been minor. This was untrue.
There had occurred high level meetings involving Social Services Safeguarding,
the CQC and even Cleveland police. Mr Barkley in his round-up also failed to
mention the first or second inquiries.
Following the CEO’s written thanks to me for appealing
against the first inquiry findings and raising the seclusion matters (3.2.12) prompting
the Seclusion Review along with a copy of the Seclusion Review report itself I
was immediately dismissed a month later on an allegation of confidentiality-breaching
relating to the very seclusion incident (2.9.10) that prompted the Seclusion
Review when I legitimately accessed the secluded patients personal computerised
file to brief myself about the incident that led to the seclusion and crucially
to know something of her operational strategies should I ever be summoned via inter-ward
emergency alarm bells to assist in a similar incident.
On reading the circumstance of that seclusion however it was
apparent that the incident had been 1) appallingly triggered via poor and
provocative handling, 2) unnecessarily extended and very poorly managed
throughout.
This female patient lived on an adjacent ward within
Roseberry Park forensic hospital and my file accessing was
held to be a serious breach of confidentiality. However in the circumstances of
a forensic hospital it was not and adjacent ward file accessing was normal
practice and was similarly applied even in the Trusts much less secure
challenging behaviour residential service.
Following my spirited defence this allegation was necessarily
reduced at my appeal-against-dismissal hearing to accessing the clinical file for too long or excessive “time volume”
although no policy existed about what constituted a reasonable accessing time. I was then referred to
the NMC by the manager who dismissed me, forensic LD service director Levi
Buckley.
The generic reason offered by Mr Buckley for the NMC referral
was the suggestion that my practice was out of date, that I was “stuck in the
70s and 80s" and that I had “failed to move on”. However the Seclusion
Review report noted in its findings a single piece of modern up-to-date
behavioural work within the forensic hospital which was mine.
It was an example of the Challenging Behaviour Pathway that I
was asked to complete by the charge nurse because no other nurse had either
heard of it or knew how to apply it. The technique was subsequently recommended
in the Seclusion Reports findings in the absence of anything like it as
something to be applied throughout the forensic
service.
The dismissing service director, Levi Buckley claimed under
NMC oath that he had never read the Seclusion Review, also that he was unaware
of its findings. However the Seclusion Review report was a very significant
document undertaken on the order of the trusts CEO and by the services most
senior practitioners. Within its findings it specifically states that all
operational directors were required to read it and to “note its findings”.
The Trusts deputy CEO
and the chairman of my later appeal-against-dismissal hearing Les Morgan also under
NMC oath claimed that the transcript of my appeal-against-dismissal was not
circulated afterwards because that was “against Trust policy”. However, the NMC
solicitor who investigated and wrote the case against me, James Davies, (Morgan-Cole)
was according to his own case told by the Trust that the transcript had been “lost”.
However, another former employee who resigned after making
complaints and similarly referred to the NMC was given a copy of the transcript
of their appeal-against-dismissal hearing.
My original appeal-against-dismissal hearing included my
direct questioning of the Trust CEO Martin Barkley and also the Trust Chairman
Jo Turnbull during which Mr Barkley admitted that Mrs Turnbull had passed to him my private and confidential
letter addressed to her. Therefore she breached confidentiality by passing it
and he breached confidentiality by reading it. The Trust Chairman is a qualified
solicitor.
Also revealed under my direct questioning was specialist
clinical manager Ian Aisbit’s limited understanding of his own behavioural
specialism. He was neither able to name the five types of formal direct observation
nor explain the difference between formal direct and informal participatory
observation ..quite basic to a suitably competent practitioner.
Unsurprisingly he was not invited by the Trust to attend as a
witness in the subsequent NMC hearing despite the fact that the hearing
considered the one technical behavioural charge out of the three in which he
was directly involved as the suspending nurse specialist manager of the
community challenging behaviour service.
Those prosecution witnesses that did attend could barely remember
anything under questioning and couldn’t answer even basic questions about their
specialism, e.g. what is meant by a formal direct observation and how is it
typically conducted? etc.
I am clearly dealing with dishonesty and incompetence. However, the NMC have declared these
individuals “creditable witnesses”. The
NMC further declared that I had “used my complaints about various abuses..” as
a “blanket excuse for my failure to
follow the very policies that are designed to deal with such matters”.
On the contrary, I had indeed followed Trust policies and also
NMC guidelines very closely and my actions were not those of a whistle blower
but a complainant. I wrote hundreds of pages, letters, statements and reports throughout
my short employment which resulted in two internal inquiries.
The response from the Trust was a hackneyed collection of contrived
disciplinary allegations and a flawed referral to the NMC who took up and
continues the challenge with apparent gusto.
The prominent NMC charge that repeats the Trusts earlier
allegation was that I inapproprietelly accessed the clinical files of forensic wards
patients on adjacent wards. This NMC allegation involved all thirteen
originally alleged patients private clinical file accessings that were quickly
dropped by the trust at the time to four at my trust dismissal hearing then to just
one at my trust appeal-against-dismissal hearing which was then finally removed
under the weight of argument that proved this to be both normal indeed expected
practice in a forensic hospital and replaced by firstly, the time element that suggested that the
single accessing had been too long, and secondly, the suggestion that as a
member of staff who hadn’t completed local restraint training (me) that I would
never be redeployed or called upon to attend another wards emergency alarm call
so was not therefore required to access the file. Quite untrue.
This second part was simply untrue given my direct experience
of having been called to an adjacent ward prior to MOVA training and supported
by a written confirmation by the charge nurse confirming this to be untrue all of which was explained at the NMC
substantive hearing.
On accessing my original employment file the investigating NMC
solicitor James Davies (Morgan-Cole) declared that I had additionally breached
confidentiality by writing my initial December 2010 statement on my home computer and in so doing identified
a double-dosing victim without the severely LD Downs Syndrome gentleman’s’ “consent”
thus constituting an additional and what turned out to be the primary charge,
i.e. failing to obtain permission from an abuse victim to report the abuse.
This original statement in which included this complaint was
presented at a trust meeting on the 1.12.10 where it was agreed via the
chairman to identity cited patients. Having used the statement throughout the
meeting I submitted it at the end. The Trust did not present this as a
disciplinary matter at the time for this very reason. However, it clearly didn’t
deter the NMC from using it to create a new and central charge.
The NMC found me guilty on two out of three original
pre APPEAL-AGAINST-DISMISSAL Trust
charges plus their own new charge of confidentiality-breaching, i.e. revealing an
abuse victims identity “without their consent” (but with the permission of the hearing
in which it was heard).
These charges were upheld despite compelling explanations of why
I was completely innocent of all of them. The NMC’s suggestion that the discredited
Trust prosecution witnesses were credible is very, very untrue.
During the NMC’s eighteen month initial interim stage that included from the beginning very restrictive interim
sanctions I proved that neither my various NMC caseworkers nor the various NMC interim
hearing panellists were actually reading the NMC solicitor James Davies’s case
material.
This occurred because the case material was replete with
serious constructional errors including key reports split and pasted back to
back making them incomprehensible. No one noticed, neither panellists of the various
interim hearings nor three successive NMC case workers.
Despite my queries and prompts to the NMC about whether
anything unusual had been noticed nothing was ever picked up on. I therefore
formally complained to the NMC but the matter was never seriously considered
and was dealt with via a brief email from manager Dan Regan.
Later at my substantive hearing, panellists declined to ask
me any questions at the conclusion of my cross-examination by their barrister,
David Clark QC. Panellists were not briefed on commencement of proceedings,
were slow in starting and there was insufficient time to properly consider the
matters. The only apparent haste was to allow sufficient time at the end to write
up the outcome. Little heed was given to the principle of “leeway” typically
forwarded towards unrepresented registrants.
Having already been subject to eighteen months of close
professional scrutiny via an “interim
conditions of practice order” prior to the substantive hearing and having subsequently
been found guilty I was then sentenced to a further eighteen month “substantive conditions of practice order”
which is even more arduous than the initial interim order and in addition requires
a Personal Development Plan in which I am required to demonstrate learning in
relation to charge-related topics, i.e. confidentiality. Thus my close scrutiny
sanction in total is to be for three
years.
From the moment of the NMC referral I have been prevented from
either re-joining the NHS in the short to medium term or indeed achieving any kind
of stable contracted employment at all other than zero hour contracts as at present.
At the end of eighteen months the NMC will decide whether to conclude matters
or to continue.
A crucial factor is that a single even merely perceived “breach”
of any condition however trivial will result in the immediate suspension of my
registration indefinitely and therefore stopping employment or the means to
practice.
I
represented myself throughout as the RCN quickly pulled out during the early
interim stage when I insisted upon open and transparent dialogue with my NMC
case worker. The chairman of the substantive hearing, Linda Stone was fairly
hostile throughout and repeatedly interrupted my attempts to cross-examine trust
prosecution witnesses two of whose testimony elements were subsequently
demonstrated as untruthful.
I gratefully
received expressions of encouragement from the NMC barrister David Clark. He told
me outside of the hearing room that the NMC were “looking for a caution to a conditions-of-practice
outcome”, and even offering friendly encouragement.
The
participation of the two other panellists was minimal and no questions were
offered at the conclusion of David Clarke’s cross-examination of me.
Each
element of the three charges found guilty is disproven.
What
has been demonstrated is that 1) very senior Trust managers have lied under
oath and 2) the only demonstrable breach of confidentiality has been committed
by the Chairman and Chief Executive of Tees Esk & Wear NHS Trust.
David Dickinson
13.6.14
POSTSCRIPT (12.9.14)
On the 18.7.14 the CQC published
the report of its visit to Roseberry Park hospital held just days previously. It
found major shortcomings in relation to many aspects of care provision and resident
safety including inappropriate, excessive and poorly applied seclusion practices.
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