I'm going to guess (to borrow another common phrase) that the new investigator didn't make any difference to the overall outcome?
I sent PHSO the relevant contemporaneous notes - why did I bother? I focused on police once I grasped the scale of PHSO issues from @phsothefacts.
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Replying to @C7RKY @MikeStone2_EoL and
Did the police deal with your complaint
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Replying to @phsothefacts @MikeStone2_EoL and
That's more than a tweet's worth of response, I'm afraid Della. VERY long story short; they're still giving me the runaround, despite having an MP & his QC friend review evidence & write to Ch Constable. That provoked a joke of an investigation, which I'm about to complain about.
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Replying to @C7RKY @phsothefacts and
You’re lucky to have supportive friends. 2013 pre-op I was told by a barrister friend that I had a case for CUH failure to notice/treat obvious pelvic mass. But I thought that simply asking kindly for corrections in care, honesty, that fair, equitable care would be forthcoming.
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Replying to @kateheydonorg @C7RKY and
Even winning a landmark court ruling (that did not interrogate care but was to secure rights to know about DNACPR) wasn’t enough. This statement from them also supports the ‘She was dying anyway’ stance we had throughout the case... https://www.cuh.nhs.uk/news/communications/cuh-statement-court-appeal-decision-respect-janet-tracey-case …
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Replying to @katemasters67 @C7RKY and
I met Keith McNeil, CEO. Maybe your Decision was part of the impetus for useful non-blame open-learning workshop* CUH did around that time? Your decision may have contributed to some positive change maybe? *(I was the only still-physically-damaged (2012) person in attendance).
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Replying to @kateheydonorg @C7RKY and
if it was, we weren’t told. All we got was inexplicable answers to the questions we asked about care and a lot of negativity. Things have changed a bit I feel, New CEO, I’ve been invited to see what they’ve changed-I just can’t go back there. Unresolved complaint and PTSD.
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Replying to @katemasters67 @kateheydonorg and
I progressed my complaint for a further 18 months after the end of the case and it was clear they were never going to answer the questions, so I closed it unresolved.
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Replying to @katemasters67 @kateheydonorg and
I’m pleased to hear about the open learning workshop. It sounds positive.
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Replying to @katemasters67 @C7RKY and
It was pretty awesome. The best part was that there was absolutely no blame, no victim-blaming, no criticism of staff.. So everyone could focus on opportunities for constructive learning. Most people there were very emotionally traumatised; I was the only one physically damaged.
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That's all fine if you're dealing with the truth in the first place. Where that remains hidden, blame still exists, imho. Learning is impossible in such an environment. The only thing I've regarded as 'awesome' about the medical world so far, has been its capacity for corruption.
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