Hospital Death (Clinical Procedures and medical management) related deaths
PFD Category
Reports: 2,487
Areas: 72
Earliest: Feb 2013
Latest: 19 Mar 2026
72% response rate (above 62% average). 57% of classified responses show concrete action taken. Reports rose 33% from 176 (2023) to 234 (2024).
PFD Reports
2,487 resultsJohn Day
All Responded
2014-0251
4 Jun 2014
Isle of Wight
Beacon Healthcare
Isle of Wight Clinical Commissioning Gr…
Concerns summary
Out-of-hours doctors lack crucial access to patient medical records, particularly allergy information, increasing the risk of incorrect medication prescriptions when patients provide inaccurate details or lack capacity.
Denise Prior
All Responded
2014-0262
2 Jun 2014
West Sussex
Western Sussex Hospitals NHS Trust
Concerns summary
Inadequate hospital record-keeping for oxygen levels, prescription, and the application of the NEWS system poses a risk of future deaths.
Jennifer Morrison
All Responded
2014-0265
2 Jun 2014
Wirral
Arrowe Park Hospital
Concerns summary
Missing medical records hampered investigations, and bed shortages combined with inadequate staffing during peak holiday seasons led to prolonged assessment unit stays and treatment delays.
Aimee Varney
All Responded
2014-0249
2 Jun 2014
Bedfordshire & Luton
Luton and Dunstable University Hospital
Concerns summary
NICE Guidelines for referring patients with suspected epilepsy to a Specialist Tertiary Centre were not followed, risking delayed or inappropriate specialized care.
Essa Shah
All Responded
2014-0250
2 Jun 2014
Bedfordshire & Luton
Luton and Dunstable University Hospital
Concerns summary
Crucial literature on the dangers of co-sleeping is only available in English, preventing non-English speaking mothers from accessing vital safety information.
Stephen Ward
All Responded
2014-0248
29 May 2014
London Inner (North)
Camden & Islington NHS Foundation Trust
Concerns summary
The mental health crisis team lacked a clear protocol for following up with police after requesting a welfare check, leading to delays when police did not respond.
Rainer Wickens
All Responded
2014-0234
20 May 2014
Surrey
St George’s Healthcare NHS Trust
Concerns summary
Significant delays in clot treatment and CTPA scans were caused by poor communication during handovers and between medical staff. Additionally, medical notes had gaps and vulnerable patients had unsupervised access to stairs.
Gregg O’Reilly
All Responded
2014-0221
19 May 2014
London Inner (North)
Barts Health
Concerns summary
Missed opportunities to refer to critical care, compounded by a lack of recorded observations over 27 hours, suggest systemic failures in patient monitoring and escalation of care.
Peter Franklin
All Responded
2014-0230
19 May 2014
Mid Kent & Medway
Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust
Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Par…
Concerns summary
Confusion in terminology and lack of information sharing between health teams and the CRISIS team hindered effective care. Significant delays in documentation meant the GP was unaware of crucial hospital admissions and mental health involvement.
Denise Parramore
Historic (No Identified Response)
2014-0247
19 May 2014
South Yorkshire (West)
NHS Sheffield Clinical Commissioning Gr…
NHS England
Concerns summary
A lack of open, two-way communication and inability to access shared documentation between primary and secondary care meant psychiatric services were unaware of critical medication prescriptions.
Gary Bradshaw
All Responded
2014-0232
15 May 2014
Manchester (South)
Department of Health and Social Care
Stockport NHS Foundation Trust
Concerns summary
The hospital experienced significant delays in diagnosis, inappropriate medication prescribing before test results, inadequate patient monitoring, and poor communication/IT systems, leading to suboptimal care.
Courtney Mills
All Responded
2014-0224
12 May 2014
Portsmouth & South East Hampshire
Waterside Medical Centre
Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust
Concerns summary
Repeated prescription errors and severe communication breakdowns between the GP surgery and hospital led to dangerous delays in obtaining critical medication, putting the patient at risk of withdrawal.
Abiola Dosunmu
All Responded
2014-0209
9 May 2014
London (Inner South)
Kings College Hospital NHS Foundation T…
Concerns summary
Critical test results were not communicated effectively between departments, to the patient, or to the GP, resulting in a missed diagnosis and suboptimal care, which was inadequately reviewed by a serious incident investigation.
Ann Bennett
Historic (No Identified Response)
2014-0233
9 May 2014
West Yorkshire (East)
Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
Concerns summary
The coroner endorsed findings from a Trust investigation report that identified serious issues contributing to a potentially avoidable death, necessitating a robust response.
Gianna Khan
All Responded
2014-0219
9 May 2014
Bedfordshire & Luton
Bedfordshire Clinical Commissioning Gro…
Concerns summary
A patient with a head injury was inappropriately streamed to a GP clinic instead of the Emergency Department, indicating a critical failure in triage protocols, which was impeded by the CCG.
Linda Fisher
All Responded
2014-0226
9 May 2014
Blackpool & Fylde
Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Founda…
Concerns summary
Inaccurate medication dosages resulted from doctors relying on patient-reported weight, and critical family medical history was not obtained or effectively communicated among staff.
Gary Richards
All Responded
2014-0212
9 May 2014
London (Inner South)
South London and Maudsley Trust
Concerns summary
Psychiatric services failed to properly assess self-harm risk, communicate patient vulnerabilities, ensure follow-up due to unrecorded contact details, and implement crucial recommendations from a previous incident report.
Frank Pope
Partially Responded
2014-0216
8 May 2014
London Inner (North)
Northern Medical Centre
Whittington Hospital NHS Trust
Concerns summary
There is no clear "back-up" process to ensure follow-up for patients lacking capacity, particularly when family members are not copied into correspondence, risking missed appointments.
Peter Brookes
All Responded
2014-0205
7 May 2014
London Inner (North)
University College London Hospitals NHS…
Concerns summary
Concerns include hospital administration of Parkinson's medication not following patient regimens, unavailability of doctors for weekend reviews, and an unresolved dispensing error causing wrong medication.
Mary Wanya
Historic (No Identified Response)
2014-0192
30 Apr 2014
West Yorkshire (East)
Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
Concerns summary
Significant delays in urgent psychiatric assessments, an inadequate system for mentally ill patients in medical units, and a flawed investigation report by unqualified staff raise serious safety concerns.
Samiyo Farah
Partially Responded
2014-0202
30 Apr 2014
Manchester (North)
Greater Manchester West Mental Health N…
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Department of Health and Social Care
+3 more
Concerns summary
Critical concerns include the absence of national observation guidelines for children in mental health units, poor communication protocols for inter-sector patient transfers, and inconsistent psychiatric referrals from A&E.
Janet Blackman
Historic (No Identified Response)
2014-0200
29 Apr 2014
West Sussex
Western Sussex Hospitals NHS Trust
Department of Health and Social Care
Sussex Partnership NHS Trust
Concerns summary
Psychiatric units fail to provide essential physical health care, including DVT prophylaxis, indicating a need for seamless, integrated care delivery for both physical and mental health.
Stephen Widman
Historic (No Identified Response)
2014-0189
29 Apr 2014
Plymouth, Torbay & South Devon
Department of Health and Social Care
Torbay Hospital
Concerns summary
The provided text does not detail any specific concerns.
Jennifer Tompkins
Historic (No Identified Response)
2014-0188
28 Apr 2014
London (Inner South)
Kings College Hospital NHS Foundation T…
Concerns summary
Inadequate staff training on IV medication administration speed and a systemic failure to document early cessation of IV infusions pose a risk to patient safety.
Robert Perkins
All Responded
2014-0195
28 Apr 2014
Avon
North Bristol NHS Trust
Concerns summary
A critical failure to immobilise a patient's cervical spine, unavailability of a prescribed collar at a neuroscience centre, and insufficient staff awareness created a high risk of serious injury.