1/ Regulation 20 Duty Of Candour 2014 applies to 'registered people'; which likely applies solely to medical professionals. 2/ No mention that it applies to requests for Duty of Candour around historical events, albeit Regulation 20, an addition to 2008 Health & Social Care Act.
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Excellent point. If I'd had access to NICE Guidelines tests after Bupa* DVT diagnosis. Or made full recovery after pelvic surgery for DVT-cause a year later; there'd be no need to continue asking for help. (27/9/12 MRI* found no provoke-injury, DVT diagnosed 1/10/12 ultrasound*).
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Also, for me, my trust in UK medical professionals died in 2012, when I was refused access to fair and equitable medical social (NHS) healthcare for symptomatic proximal undiagnosed DVT. Then refused NICE Guidelines care after (Bupa) diagnosis. I feel, felt discriminated against.
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If anything, that distrust has grown since 2012: Even after changing GP, new GP failed to tell me, NHS Records, >200 pages of my medical notes remained missing for 18 months, further impacting negatively on me. GP didn't even report to ICO when another patient record given to me.
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That's why, when I hear about the tragedy of other peoples' children dying, such as
#BenCondon or#JusticeForOliver death sounds plausible; tragically normal, in that the care that resulted in death, sounds like the usual standard of health care experienced routinely, here in UK. -
It's good for the vast majority, but it's only when something goes wrong that you get to find out the true nature of the beast you're dealing with. By which point, it's usually too late, sadly.
End of conversation
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