🔎 Why mistakes happen
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Heavy workload: Doctors and nurses handle huge numbers of patients and results every day.
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Fragmented IT systems: GP, hospital, and lab systems don’t always link, so information can get lost.
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Human error: Fatigue, multitasking, and assumptions all increase the risk of oversight.
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Defensive culture: Trusts sometimes minimise problems to protect reputation or avoid litigation.
Most errors are not deliberate — but they can cause harm if they are not caught quickly.
Martha’s Rule was created after a young girl died when her family’s concerns were ignored — it’s designed to stop that happening again.
🛡 What safeguards are already in place?
Although mistakes still happen, the NHS has many systems to reduce risk and catch errors early:
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Critical results alerts: Labs automatically flag dangerously abnormal results so they cannot be overlooked.
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Early Warning Scores (NEWS2): Vital signs generate a score that prompts urgent review if the patient is deteriorating.
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Sepsis protocols: Hospitals have rapid-response pathways for suspected sepsis.
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Cross-checking: High-risk drugs often require two professionals to sign off.
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Incident reporting: Staff can log “near misses” to help the system learn.
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Duty of Candour: Trusts must inform patients if serious harm has been caused by an error.
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Martha’s Rule: Gives patients/families the right to request an urgent independent review if they feel concerns are being ignored.
💻 Are new IT systems making care safer?
The NHS is moving to large electronic patient record (EPR) systems such as Epic, Cerner and Lorenzo. These bring real safety gains:
Safer features
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Automatic alerts for critical blood results.
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Built-in early warning score (NEWS2) calculations to detect deterioration.
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Electronic prescribing with dose, allergy, and interaction checks.
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Shared records across hospitals, GPs, and community services.
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Digital audit trails showing who reviewed results and when.
But challenges remain
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Too many alerts can cause “alert fatigue,” leading staff to dismiss warnings.
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System crashes or downtime can force staff back to paper, which is less safe.
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Complexity can slow clinicians down until they are confident with the system.
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Hospital and GP systems still don’t fully integrate everywhere, so results can still be missed.
Bottom line: New IT has improved safety compared to the old paper-and-fax systems, but it isn’t foolproof. It works best alongside clinical vigilance and patient involvement.
✅ What you can do if you suspect a mistake
Step 1. Check directly with the clinical team
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Ask: “Can you confirm this result/issue has been reviewed?”
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Request a written explanation or clinic letter.
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Keep notes of the conversation.
Step 2. Escalate to a senior doctor/clinical lead
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Ask who the consultant in charge is.
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Write your concern clearly and factually.
Step 3. If your loved one is deteriorating: use Martha’s Rule
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You can request an urgent review by a critical care team, separate from the ward team.
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Available 24/7 in hospitals where introduced.
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Say: 👉 “We want a review under Martha’s Rule.”
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If not yet in your hospital, ask for the critical care outreach team.
Step 4. Contact PALS (Patient Advice & Liaison Service)
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They can chase answers and log concerns.
Step 5. Make a formal complaint to the Trust
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Keep it factual (what happened, why it matters, what outcome you want).
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The Trust must acknowledge within 3 working days.
Step 6. Escalate outside the Trust
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If unsatisfied, go to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO).
🧭 Tips to protect yourself & your family
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Keep copies of all results and letters.
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Track your results in a simple log.
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Bring support (family, advocate, charity like AvMA).
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Stay factual: stick to dates, facts, and impact.
🔑 Key message
Mistakes in healthcare happen for many reasons — but the NHS has safeguards and new IT systems to reduce risk, and Martha’s Rule adds an extra urgent safety net.
Patients and families still play a vital role by asking questions, checking results, and speaking up.
You are not being difficult — you are being safe.
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