Daily Mail

Ten years on... Labour’s Welsh NHS ‘fails to learn’ from hospital scandal

- By Mark Hookham

THE Labour-run Welsh NHS has failed to learn the lessons of one of Britain’s most shocking hospital scandals, according to a report.

The Mail on Sunday revealed in 2014 how elderly patients at a hospital in North Wales were left covered in faeces, injured themselves crawling on urinecover­ed floors and were physically restrained with tables and chairs.

Nurses in the Tawel Fan dementia ward at Glan Clwyd Hospital, near Rhyl, were found to have threatened and sworn at patients, left them naked and taunted them about their past love lives.

Almost a decade on, a fresh review commission­ed by the Welsh government has found NHS bosses failed to implement a string of recommenda­tions to prevent the appalling abuse being repeated.

Health expert Donna Ockenden made 50 recommenda­tions across two reviews into the scandal. But the new report by the Royal College of Psychiatri­sts (RCP), seen by the Mail, could only find ‘good’ evidence that just 19 of her recommenda­tions had been fully implemente­d by Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, which manages the hospital.

It found ‘some’ evidence another 28 had been implemente­d. There was little evidence of progress on the other three.

Ms Ockenden’s second review in 2018 said the board’s leadership was ‘wholly inappropri­ate and significan­tly flawed’ and found it employed just one consultant nurse who specialise­d in dementia.

Six years on, the RCP could find no consultant nurse ‘with specific responsibi­lity for dementia within the mental health and disability directorat­e’.

Relatives of former patients on the ward, which closed before the MoS exposé, voiced their anger last night. John Stewart, 59, whose late father-inlaw John Martindale was on Tawel Fan, described it as a ‘disgrace’.

He confronted Vaughan Gething, Welsh health minister from 2016 to 2021 and now first minister, with the report as the politician kicked off Labour’s election campaign in Llandudno on Thursday. ‘He’d not even read it,’ said Mr Stewart.

In 2018, a report by the Health and Care Advisory Service found no ‘institutio­nal abuse’ at Tawel Fan but accepted there were failings. It made 15 recommenda­tions – the RCP found ‘good’ evidence that nine had been implemente­d.

The Welsh Government said the health board accepted the review’s key findings and ‘we expect them to deliver those’.

Betsi Cadwaladr chief executive Carol Shillabeer said it was ‘determined to take action that improves services’.

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