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NHS staff make over 1,700 calls to Martha's Rule helplines in first six months
صحة
BBC UK News01.05.2026صحة1 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

NHS staff make over 1,700 calls to Martha's Rule helplines in first six months

Over 1,000 calls helped identify serious patient deterioration; more than 500 patients transferred to intensive care

نظرة سريعة

  • NHS staff in England have made over 1,700 calls to Martha's Rule helplines since their launch in September 2024, with over 1,000 calls helping identify serious patient deterioration.
  • The scheme, set up after 13-year-old Martha Mills died from care failings, has led to more than 500 ICU transfers and around 1,500 treatment changes.
  • Martha's mother Merope Mills said a nurse who worried about Martha would have used the helpline had it existed.

ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي

لماذا يهم

Martha's Rule was introduced following the death of 13-year-old Martha Mills in 2021, after a coroner found serious failings in her care at King's College Hospital in London. The rule allows families, carers, patients, and NHS staff to request an urgent review if they notice deteriorating health and concerns are not being listened to.

حجم الخط

More than 1,700 calls have been made by NHS staff in England to Martha's Rule helplines to flag concerns about patient care, new figures show. The helplines were set up after a campaign by the parents of 13-year-old Martha Mills who died after serious failings in her care. Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Merope Mills, Martha's mother, said there was "one particular nurse" who might have made use of the helpline had it been available to her. In 2022, a coroner ruled Martha would probably have survived if she had been transferred earlier to intensive care and given appropriate treatment. Martha's Rule encourages families, carers and patients to speak up if they notice changes in a patient's condition and to seek an urgent review from a critical care team if their health is deteriorating and concerns are not being listened to. Staff, including those in junior roles, can also ask for a review from a team independent of the one they work with. The helplines have been available in 143 hospital sites in England since September 2024 and of the nearly 1,800 calls made by staff between then and February this year, over 1000 have helped identify serious deterioration of a patient's condition, says NHS England. Mills stressed the importance of the calls coming from staff as they made use of the "non-confrontational" way to raise concerns. She said the "extremely hierarchical" nature of medicine made it hard for junior staff to question their superiors. "I've always said that I would have called the Martha's Rule number had it existed when she was in hospital. There was this one particular nurse who I think would have done it before me if it was available. I could tell that she was worried." Mills said she thinks about what that nurse "might have done" had the helpline been available when Martha was ill in hospital. Aidan Fowler, National Director of Patient Safety at NHS England, said while not every call led directly to a life being saved, the scheme had "proven its worth". More than 500 patients were transferred to intensive care as a result of calls, Fowler says, and there have been some vital changes to treatment. "Some of the really important treatments are antibiotics, fluids given on the ward. And there's about 1,500 people who've had changes of care like that, all of which are potentially affecting outcomes, saving lives."

أسئلة مفتوحة

  • What specific changes to treatment were made for the 1,500 patients?
  • How many lives have been definitively saved by the scheme?
  • Will the helplines be expanded to more hospital sites?

مواضيع ذات صلة

This article was originally published by BBC UK News.

أخبار ذات صلة

المزيد حول هذا الموضوعmartha's rule