#JusticeforLB briefing on #Mazars report into deaths at #SouthernHealth

WHAT IS THE MAZARS REVIEW?

A review of all deaths of people in receipt of care from Mental Health (MH) and Learning Disability (LD) services in Southern Health (SH) between April 2011 and March 2015.

Learning Disability deaths that occurred prior to the merger of Ridgeway and SH in November 2012 were not in the scope of the review.

It sought to establish the extent of unexpected deaths in MH and LD services provided by the Trust, and to identify any themes, patterns or issues that may need further investigation.

Mazars were ‘asked to benchmark this Trust with other similar organisations where this was possible’.

WHAT THE MAZARS REVIEW IS NOT

‘It is not a clinical case review of each service user and we have therefore not tried to identify clinically unavoidable deaths’.

‘It was outside the scope of the review to verify whether all unexpected deaths were reported as such’.

WHAT WAS THE SCOPE OF THE REVIEW

‘The scope of this independent review was to help secure:

  • a shared view across all the key players of risks within Southern Health NHS Foundation Trust services, of improvement action required, and plans to deliver change
  • advice to the Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) about Learning Disability commissioning, data management and analysis, and adverse events indicators’.

ON AVERAGE HOW MANY DEATHS WERE THERE?

On average 2600 deaths are recorded per year of people who were in receipt of MH or LD services from SH, or who had been in receipt of these services within the 12 months prior to their death.

Most are very elderly and many of the deaths were expected. However, some people die earlier than expected and it is important that these deaths are identified correctly. It is important that the right level of review or investigation is undertaken to improve services, identify any service failure, learn from any mistakes and to provide families and stakeholders with relevant information.

HOW MANY DEATHS WERE THERE IN TOTAL?

At least 10,306 deaths of service users and most were expected. 1454 deaths were reported as ‘death incidents’.

Screenshot 2015-12-17 13.33.43

Not all death incidents were unexpected deaths – but 722 were categorised as unexpected.

WHAT WAS THE LIKELIHOOD OF YOUR DEATH BEING INVESTIGATED?

This depended on your needs and the services you used. If you had a learning disability or were over 65yrs old and using mental health services, there was very little chance your death would be looked into. 

56% of all deaths in Adult Mental Health were subject to an IMA, 30% of total deaths were investigated as a CIR/SIRI

20% of all deaths in Learning Disability were subject to an IMA and 1% investigated

0.3% of deaths amongst Older People Mental Health services were investigated as a SIRI.

Of 337 deaths of people with a Learning Disability recorded over the four years, two resulted in a SIRI despite at least 47% being reported to Ulysses.

SOUTHERN HEALTH ARE SUGGESTING THAT LOTS OF THESE PEOPLE WERE NOTHING TO DO WITH THEM

Not all of the service users will have been on the Trust’s caseload at the time of death, although 70% of people with a learning disability who died had been seen within the preceding 91 days before death.

Of the total 337 learning disabled people whose deaths were recorded, 68 had an initial management assessment and there was an absence of subsequent investigation by the Trust in all but 4 of these cases.

There were 9190 deaths of Older People in Mental Health services (9173 deaths over 65) in the period. Not all will have been current service users at the time of death but 81% were seen during the preceding 6 months.

In total, 30 deaths of service users over 65 were classed as SIRIs (0.3%).

SOUTHERN HEALTH ARE SAYING THAT THEY HAVE EVERYTHING UNDER CONTROL NOW

Last year, 2014/15, there were 2322 (2314 over 65 years) deaths in Older People Mental Health services, only three were investigated as serious incidents by the Trust (0.13%). This is the least amount across all four years. The investigation performance is deteriorating, not improving.

SOUTHERN HEALTH ARE SAYING 732 DEATHS WERE EXPECTED

Southern Health have no way of knowing that when a large number of deaths had no investigation at all. 57% of learning disabled people’s deaths reported to the Trust Ulysses system were not assessed in any way.

SOUTHERN HEALTH ARE SAYING 345 OF THE UNEXPECTED DEATHS WERE DUE TO NATURAL CAUSES

The Mazars review could not assess every death. We have no reason to believe that Southern Health can be believed in this regard. They said that Connor Sparrowhawk’s death was due to natural causes. The inquest jury found it not to be the case and that it was contributed to by the neglect of Southern Health.

You can download this statement as a full FAQ ‘briefing’ by clicking the link that follows JusticeforLB_FAQs. We use the term ‘briefing’ with our tongues firmly in our cheeks, more on that here.

The Mazars report is available here.

Jeremy Hunt’s written statement to the Houses of Parliament is available here.

6 responses to “#JusticeforLB briefing on #Mazars report into deaths at #SouthernHealth”

  1. […] is now 16 days since NHS England published the Mazars report. You can read our briefing on it here. Despite the horror that it contains, the responses by the Secretary of State and by the […]

  2. Julie Owen says:

    We need to concentrate our attention on those deaths which occurred within SH hospital units, nursing homes, care homes and Supported Living schemes. And on those deceased service-users who received 24 hour care at home from SH.

    The other deaths could become a smoke screen.

  3. […] January 2016 inspection. This inspection was triggered by the horrendous failings reported in the Mazars report that was published just before Christmas last […]

  4. […] shows how little they have learned, and how unprepared they are to take responsibility. When the Mazars report was published back in December, Katrina Percy, the CEO at Southern Health had this to […]

  5. […] how things can be improved for others. They asked David Nicholson, the then CEO of NHS England, to commission a review to look at other deaths under Southern Health’s care, to identify whether what happened to Connor was a one-off, or whether, as they suspected (and […]

  6. […] Mazars report found 1% of the deaths of people with a learning disability at Southern Health were investigated over a four year […]

Leave a Reply to georgejulian.co.uk - Prosecuting the NHS, denial and state violence #JusticeforLB #WCMTLD Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *