Exactly. These threads are extraordinary. Weaving in and out of speculation, exaggeration, arrogance and accusation. We don't know.
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I think doing so would be a huge step towards restoring public confidence in the medical profession.
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For me, we will also need to understand how he evaded scrutiny for that step to be meaningful. Still plenty more yet to be learned from this case, I suspect.
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Sadly it mirrors what I have seen elsewhere in similar cases. If fault is found it tends to be with junior, female and or ethnic minority staff. There seems to be an unspoken irrebuttable presumption that a senior white male consultant could not possibly do wrong.
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Many medics on here are making just that point. I have, over the years, seen juniors thrown under the bus in coroners and in SUIs by consultants (not always posh white male ones). What tended to happen next was consultant shunned by others in department (unless very powerful)..
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... the junior usually managed to get back on track, because those around knew what happened. Some juniors were not the female, non-white stereotype
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I personally identify with that scenario. (From the other side of the curtain of course).
End of conversation
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