Tuesday, 3 July 2012

George Galloway "party" cllrs in Bradford caught "referring to Tower Hamlets rather than Bradford"


from the web site of

THE TELEGRAPH AND ARGUS
Bradford

http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/local/localbrad/9793674.Respect_party_criticised_over_council_paper_gaffe/


Document refers to Tower Hamlets instead of Bradford

Respect's George GallowayRespect's George Galloway
Respect councillors have been criticised for their “cut and paste” approach to politics, which has led to the party referring to Tower Hamlets rather than Bradford in one of their first motions to Bradford Council.
The Conservatives on the Council have highlighted the error which was made in a motion from Councillor Alyas Karmani, the Respect group leader, on the subject of defending the welfare state.
Councillor Glen Miller, leader of the Tories, said it was of concern when a party could not “muster the motivation to even cut and paste the motion to make reference to Bradford”.
He said: “Further to winning the Bradford West by-election in admittedly impressive fashion, the new Respect Party MP celebrated winning in “Blackburn”. Now we have a motion to Council which refers to ‘reducing child poverty in Tower Hamlets’, which makes it all too clear that the motion is likely to be a leftover from when the Respect Party still had influence and interest in their former stronghold of Tower Hamlets.”
He added: “It will be interesting to see how much of what has been promised by this new party is delivered.
“While we welcome anything and anyone that contributes to improving Bradford district, I would urge residents to view Respect’s promises with the scepticism which they are happy to apply to the promises made by the longer established political parties, in order to manage their expectations and avoid the bitter disappointment experienced by the residents of Tower Hamlets.”
Coun Karmani, the five-strong Respect group’s leader on the Council, told the Telegraph & Argus that the matter had simply been down to “clerical error”.
“The Tories should be focused on providing a robust opposition in Bradford and concentrating on the real issues rather than being preoccupied with something like this,” he said.
“We are not here to play politics, we are here to focus on the issues.
“Bradford is in absolute crisis so we need to be cohesive and work together to address the core issues, rather than this petty point scoring.”
Shortly after his shock by-election win in Bradford West, MP George Galloway blamed hoaxers for tweeting he had won a seat in Blackburn – not Bradford.
Reports suggested the new MP had tweeted: “I will try to live up to your expectations. Shattered but happy after the Blackburn triumph.”
But minutes later a message went up declaring: “Bradford is home to me now.”
Mr Galloway also appeared to blame hackers when he tweeted: “Nice try. Password now changed.”

Nurses forgot to give Kane Gorny his medication and he became so delirious he called 999





FROM  the Daily Mail web site

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2167643/Patient-dying-thirst-rang-999-Inquest-hears-mothers-fury-nurses-neglected-son.html#ixzz1zW822Tq4


Patient dying of thirst rang 999: Inquest hears of mother's fury at nurses who neglected son


Nurses forgot to give Kane Gorny his medication and he became so delirious he called 999

His mother said she spent hours trying to convince staff he needed attention but was told he was alright


Alarm finally raised an hour before his death when a doctor realised how serious his condition was


By CLAIRE ELLICOTT
PUBLISHED: 15:30, 2 July 2012 | UPDATED: 22:40, 2 July 2012

A young patient who died of dehydration at a leading teaching hospital phoned police from his bed because he was so thirsty, an inquest heard yesterday.
Officers arrived at Kane Gorny's bedside, but were told by nurses that he was in a confused state and were sent away.
The keen footballer and runner, 22, died of dehydration a few hours later.


images left out of this pubicatio
Hospital: Kane Gorny, 22, pictured with his mother Rita, needed drugs to regulate his hormone levels after successfully beating brain cancer. However, during a hospital stay nurses forgot to give him his medication


A coroner had such grave concerns about the case that she referred it to police.
Yesterday an inquest was told how Mr Gorny died after blunders and neglect by 'lazy and careless' medical staff at St George's Hospital in Tooting, South London.
His mother Rita Cronin, a civil servant told Westminster Coroner's Court that staff tutted at her and repeatedly refused to listen to her concerns that her son hadn't been given vital medication.


More...
First pictures of child who suffered 80% burns recovering after revolutionary 'grown skin' grafts
Grandmother dies from kidney failure after Indian doctor misdiagnoses her condition as HOOKWORM common on sub-continent
Joy of mother-to-be told baby would be stillborn after boy starts breathing after he is delivered

At one point he became so desperate and upset that staff sedated and restrained him – and on the night before his death, his mother said, he was not checked on by medical staff, despite being in a room on his own.
Following his death, a nurse allegedly inquired whether the family, from Balham, South-West London, was 'finished' and asked a matron in front of them whether she could 'bag him up'.
Mr Gorny, who worked in Waitrose and was training to be a locksmith and shoe repairer, had survived a malignant brain tumour in 2008.




Inquest: Rita Cronin, left, and Kane's father Peter Gorny arriving at their son's inquest. Rita told the court she had tried to convince the staff at the hospital her son needed urgent attention but they insisted he was alright
The cancer affected his pituitary gland, which controls the body's mechanisms, such as fluid levels. Part of his treatment included a course of steroids to regulate the fluid levels in his body. These drugs, however, weakened his bones and he was in hospital for a routine hip replacement.
Doctors told him that, without regular medication to control his fluid levels, he would die.
When he arrived at hospital for the hip operation, nurses assured the family they would give him his medication and said: 'Don't worry, he's in good hands – we'll look after him.'
But, despite the repeated reminders and insistence by both Mr Gorny and his family, staff failed to give him the tablets and he became severely dehydrated after being refused water.
In an interview with the Daily Mail in 2010, Miss Cronin said of the nurses who treated him: 'They were lazy, careless and hadn't bothered to check his charts and see his medication was essential. He was totally dependent on the nurses to help him and they totally betrayed him.'
Yesterday Miss Cronin told the inquest she received a distressed phone call from her son on May 27, 2009, in which he told her he'd called the police because he was so desperate for a drink.


Help: Police raced to St George's Hospital in Tooting, south London (pictured) but were turned away by staff
She then went to the hospital where she found him 'confused and angry', shouting at staff and behaving in an uncharacteristically abusive manner.
Despite this, one doctor asked if he was 'coming off the booze' and another asked if he was 'always like this'. Miss Cronin said: 'He sounded really, really distressed. He said "They won't give me anything to drink". 'He also said "I've called the police. You better get here quickly: they're all standing around the bed getting their stories straight".'
When Miss Cronin arrived, she recalled: 'They weren't doing anything. They seemed out of their depth. It felt like the two locum doctors were nervous about calling anyone more senior than them.'
The inquest heard Mr Gorny was restrained by security guards and sedated with strong medication to calm him down. Later, he was put into a side room and left alone.
Miss Cronin said she sat in his room for three hours the night before he died without a single nurse checking on him or giving him vital medicine.
'He was starting to enjoy his life again, even though he had pains in his hip.'
Kane's mother Rita Cronin

She said she told a nurse who walked past the room that Mr Gorny had not had his medication.  When Miss Cronin volunteered to return to the hospital should he wake, another nurse allegedly told her: 'You don't need to do that. If he makes noise, I'll close the door and then he won't wake everyone up.'
She added: 'I later realised that her comment was unbelievable but I was so distraught that it didn't register.'
The morning of her son's death, May 28, 2009, Miss Cronin arrived at the hospital early to find him delirious with swollen lips and a swollen tongue.
She recalled: 'I then heard three nurses outside his room and I said: "There's something wrong with my son. He doesn't look right."
'The nurse said to me "He had a good night. There's nothing wrong with him and he's just had breakfast and a chat with us."
'I thought: "How could he have had breakfast? There's no evidence (of breakfast)."
'The nurse carried on her handover then I interrupted again and said: “He's not right.”
'The other nurse then tutted and said: "She's already told you he had a good night." And with that the three of them walked off.'
Miss Cronin said she then noticed that her son hadn't been given his medication because the packet was still on the table by his bed.
She told the locum doctor about her concerns, but the doctor said it wouldn't do him any harm.
A doctor doing the rounds then checked on Mr Gorny. Miss Cronin said: 'He took one look at him then he started calling to everyone “Get in there quickly”.
'It suddenly dawned on me he hasn't had his medication, hasn't had his bloods done, nobody's given him a drink, nobody's bothered to put his drip back on him.
'Nobody's done anything since yesterday afternoon when he became aggressive.'
She said there was a 'flurry of activity' and everyone 'had a very sad look on their face' as they battled to save her son's life. Miss Cronin said: 'The main doctor came out and you could tell he was really angry. He said: “You need to go and see your son. He's dying.”
The couple then found their son lying in blood and fluid-soaked sheets and a nurse came in and asked them to help her to change them. The same nurse later came into the matron's office and asked whether they were 'finished', adding: 'Can I bag him up?'
The death certificate said Mr Gorny died of a 'water deficit' and 'hypernatraemia' – a medical term for dehydration.
Mr Gorny had radiotherapy and chemotherapy following his diagnosis of brain cancer. He was eventually given the all-clear and led a normal life until his mother noticed he was having trouble with his hip.
As he waited for the surgery, his life started to return to normal.
'He was out and about like everybody else,' said Miss Cronin yesterday.
'I always used to make him take his tablets for the next morning, just in case he stayed at a friend's house – and he knew the importance of his medication. We all did.
'He was starting to enjoy his life again, even though he had pains in his hip. He was upset he was having a hip replacement - he was worried he would be in a wheelchair when he was 50.'
Nurses at the hospital were said to have been offered counselling as a result of Mr Gorny's death.
The inquest continues. The case is still being considered by the Crown Prosecution Service.



Hospitals are killing people, say British daily papers Tuesday 03 July 2012


from the web site of the DAILY MIRROR:


Left to die of thirst: Dehydrated NHS patient, 22, even rang police as hospital staff refused to give him water

After Kane died, as his family clung to his lifeless body, a nurse asked them whether they had “finished” and could she “bag him up?”
Before op: Kane loved to keep fit and was a keen runner
Before op: Kane loved to keep fit and was a keen runner
A man dying of dehydration in an NHS hospital phoned police from his bed begging for help after being refused water by staff, an inquest was told yesterday.
And after 22-year-old Kane Gorny died, as his family clung to his lifeless body, a nurse asked them whether they had “finished” and could she “bag him up?”
Fighting back tears, his mother Rita Cronin described seeing her son’s body at the hospital.
“He was lying flat on his back,” she told the inquest. “But he was dead. He was already dead. I felt sick.”
She told how earlier she had been repeatedly fobbed off by staff when she told them her son was seriously ill, realising he had not been given fluids or medication linked to previous treatment for brain cancer.
Rita first realised something was wrong when her son called her in distress after a routine hip operation the day before he died on May 28, 2009.
“He sounded really, really distressed,” she told Westminster coroner’s court.
“He said, ‘They won’t give me anything to drink’ and ‘I’ve called the police you better get here quickly, they’re all standing around the bed getting their stories straight’.”
She rushed to St George’s Hospital in Tooting, South London where Kane was “confused and angry” and shouting abuse at staff.
Despite telling doctors he was not behaving normally, one asked her if Kane was “coming off booze” and another wanted to know if he was “always like this?”
When police turned up to answer Kane’s call for help, they were turned away by doctors.
Kane, who worked at Waitrose, had been training to become a locksmith.
He was fit and a keen runner and footballer until he was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumour in 2008.
Just weeks after being given the all-clear from his cancer, it emerged steroids used to treat him had weakened his hips, and Kane ended up in St George’s for the replacement op.
The inquest also heard Kane had been prescribed hydrocortisone which can increase the body’s retention of fluids.
Kane Gorny
Refused: Kane was so desperate for water he rang 999
But when he became distressed after being refused water, staff had him restrained by security guards and sedated him with strong medication to calm him down.
Later, he was put in a side room, where no one visited him for the rest of the evening.
Rita told the hearing, also attended by Kane’s dad Peter: “It felt to me like the two locum doctors were nervous about calling anyone more senior than them, I would have expected them to do that.”
Realising he could not have been given his night-time medication, Rita asked a nurse when he would be receiving his dose.
The nurse promised to flag it up with the night nurse. But the next day when Rita arrived at the hospital at 7.45am, her son looked worse.
“His lips were very swollen and his tongue was swollen,” she told the hearing. He just looked delirious.
Three nurses were standing outside the room. I said, ‘There’s something wrong with my son’.
“The night nurse said ‘he’s had a good night and there’s nothing wrong with him.’
“I said, ‘He’s not well’ and the other nurse tutted and said ‘She’s already told you he had a good night,’ and with that they walked off.”
It was then Kane’s mother noticed Kane’s tablets sitting by his bed.
Rita said she then approached the locum doctor, who tried to reassure her it “wouldn’t do him any harm” to miss a dose of his medication.
So she approached another more senior doctor who took action and called staff in to try to save Kane.
Rita said: “It suddenly dawned on me he hasn’t had his medication, hasn’t had his bloods done, nobody’s given him a drink, nobody’s bothered to put his drip back on him.
"Nobody’s done anything since he became aggressive.”
Kane’s family were asked to wait outside the room while doctors tried desperately to save his life.
Following his death from dehydration, they were asked to help move his body so a nurse could fit a clean sheet.
The inquest was told that later a nurse asked them: “Have you finished seeing your son yet? Can I bag him up now?”
The death certificate said Mr Gorny had died because of a ‘water deficit’ and ‘hypernatraemia’ – a medical term for dehydration.
It sparked a Serious Untoward Incident investigation at the hospital and was referred to the police by the coroner.
The hearing continues.
1 COMMENT