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[Sussex] Knife crime at Royal Sussex County Hospital



AmexRuislip

Retired Spy 🕵️‍♂️
Feb 2, 2014
34,381
Ruislip

A surgeon at a crisis-hit NHS trust used a Swiss Army penknife to open up the chest of a patient because he claimed he could not find a sterile scalpel.

University Hospitals Sussex has said the operation was an emergency, but the surgeon’s actions were “outside normal procedures and should not have been necessary”.


A tad worrying 😟
 








Peacehaven Wild Kids

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2022
3,106
The Avenue then Maloncho
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The red pepper kid

Well-known member
Dec 30, 2014
689

A surgeon at a crisis-hit NHS trust used a Swiss Army penknife to open up the chest of a patient because he claimed he could not find a sterile scalpel.

University Hospitals Sussex has said the operation was an emergency, but the surgeon’s actions were “outside normal procedures and should not have been necessary”.


A tad worrying 😟
surely they have a machine to sterilize implements ---they cant be throwing them after one use ?
 




AmexRuislip

Retired Spy 🕵️‍♂️
Feb 2, 2014
34,381
Ruislip
surely they have a machine to sterilize implements ---they cant be throwing them after one use ?
Of course they have. The NHS have to be seen to be more frugal I guess.
The NHS are getting a battering these days due to incompetent trust managers, they certainly don't need actual people who allegedly know what they're doing (trained medical experts), taking short cuts and help give the generic hospital trust a helping hand in being slagged off.

When I had my op, I was offered either a surgeon competent in performing robotic surgery or Edward Scissor Hands 😅
 




Tom Hark Preston Park

Will Post For Cash
Jul 6, 2003
71,982

A surgeon at a crisis-hit NHS trust used a Swiss Army penknife to open up the chest of a patient because he claimed he could not find a sterile scalpel.

University Hospitals Sussex has said the operation was an emergency, but the surgeon’s actions were “outside normal procedures and should not have been necessary”.


A tad worrying 😟
Fake news shirley? ???
 




dsr-burnley

Well-known member
Aug 15, 2014
2,454

A surgeon at a crisis-hit NHS trust used a Swiss Army penknife to open up the chest of a patient because he claimed he could not find a sterile scalpel.

University Hospitals Sussex has said the operation was an emergency, but the surgeon’s actions were “outside normal procedures and should not have been necessary”.


A tad worrying 😟
The surgeon shouldn't have to find a scalpel. He ought to be holding out his hand and saying "scalpel" and one will be put there. Surgical skills are too valuable to be wasted on looking for kit.
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
35,862
has a whiff of at least misreporting about it. why would a surgeon be looking for scalpel? if none available wouldn't surgery be halted before he even went it? why would he have penknife on him and be able to root around in gown to get it?
 




hart's shirt

Well-known member
Jul 8, 2003
10,910
Kitbag in Dubai
Cutting edge technology needed.
 


jackanada

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2011
3,426
Brighton
In the the days TSSU (theatre sterile surgical supply) was just part of your entirely public owned hospital.
Now it's a private venture that takes profit out and even the standard theatre pack constitutes more of the cost of an operation than the surgeon.
Also should you start running low on supplies then there's a whole (expensive) beurocracy to navigate . Where previously you'd send someone down to TSSU to say FFS we're almost out of scalpels and someone would get a wiggle on and have a batch in the autoclave minutes later.
 








Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
54,961
Faversham
 


Eeyore

Colonel Hee-Haw of Queen's Park
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Apr 5, 2014
25,593
When I was at the Princes Royal, I had my chest cut open under a local. The sugeon asked if I wanted some music on but I chose to have the cricket.

As Stuart Broad ran in to bowl the surgeon delivered his first cut. Only he hadn't anaesthetised that area.

It wasn't 'owzat I yelped. Just the ow
 






Perfidious Albion

Well-known member
Oct 25, 2011
6,313
At the end of my tether
Fake news shirley? ???
The item is well reported in different sources but the “ Health Service Journal” said this
“A BBC story about a patient being operated on with a penknife has been challenged by the trust involved as misleading.”

Unfortunately the rest of it is behind an account and paywall . But I am sure there is more to this.
 


Guy Fawkes

The voice of treason
Sep 29, 2007
8,280
In the the days TSSU (theatre sterile surgical supply) was just part of your entirely public owned hospital.
Now it's a private venture that takes profit out and even the standard theatre pack constitutes more of the cost of an operation than the surgeon.
Also should you start running low on supplies then there's a whole (expensive) beurocracy to navigate . Where previously you'd send someone down to TSSU to say FFS we're almost out of scalpels and someone would get a wiggle on and have a batch in the autoclave minutes later.
So why are these issues (and police investigations) focusing on 1 hospital?

It's possible to have one where things are poorly managed / has poor staff? How many other occasions in other hospitals has a surgeon decided to use a penknife they brought in that they usually use to cut up their fruit? is it a widespread issue (then you'd have a point) or a localised issue to one hospital on one occasion?

besides, there have been plenty of recent examples of poorly run and managed public services recently elsewhere
 


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