âMy wife died because the NHS used cheap labourâ
A man whose wife died after a drain was mistakenly left in her abdomen for 21 hours has condemned the increased use of physician associates (PAs) within the National Health Service.
Susan Pollittâs inquest concluded her death at Royal Oldham Hospital in July 2023 had been caused by an âunnecessary medical procedure contributed to by neglectâ.
Roy Pollitt did not know his 77-year-old wife was being treated by a PA â who are only required to have two yearsâ medical training â and believes âshe would have lived if the NHS had not used cheap labourâ.
The coroner who examined Mrs Pollittâs death highlighted the lack of a national framework covering PAsâ training, supervision and competency assessment.
âAt riskâ
Associates were introduced in the NHS 21 years ago with the expectation they would support doctors by delivering basic care.
Over the past two years the number of associates has more than doubled to 3,000.
According to the NHS Long Term Plan, there will be 12,000 physician and anaesthetic associates by 2036.
Fears have been expressed, however, that some have been acting beyond their original remit.
BBC News has seen evidence that in the month of Mrs Pollittâs death, the NHS trust which oversees Royal Oldham used PAs to cover nearly 20% of doctor shifts in elderly care.
Several organisations, including the British Medical Association (BMA), have voiced concerns about the blurring of professional lines between doctors and associates across NHS trusts and primary care.
Anaesthetists United, a group set up by concerned doctors and consultants, has filed a legal claim against the General Medical Council (GMC) for not, in its view, properly defining associatesâ roles and responsibilities.
One of the groupâs founders, consultant anaesthetist Richard Marks, said patients were âbeing put at riskâ as a consequence, something that âstrikes to the heart of youâ as a doctor.
BBC News has also learned that PAs have exceeded their remit in several NHS trusts, including by:
- Covering doctorsâ shifts
- Prescribing medicines
- Ordering X-rays without supervision
From December, associates will join doctors in being regulated by the GMC.
Significant concerns remain, however, from some within the medical profession.
Susan Pollitt originally went to Royal Oldham Hospital with a broken arm after suffering a fall at her home in nearby Failsworth, Greater Manchester.
Initially treated in a corridor, the great-grandmother was also diagnosed with an acute kidney injury.
Due to a lack of gastroenterology beds, she was taken to a respiratory ward.
Her daughter Kate Pollitt said staffing levels seemed âvery lowâ, adding that on the night her mother died âit took nearly four hours to find a doctor in the whole of the hospitalâ.
At Mrs Pollittâs inquest, dozens of issues with her care came to light.
Not only did the PA leave an abdominal drain â used to remove excess fluid from her body â in for 15 hours longer than permitted, but he also told colleagues to clamp it, increasing the risk of infection.
It has also emerged that, in the previous year, a liver nurse only approved the associateâs competence in using the equipment because she assumed he was a doctor.
Kate Pollitt said: âHe thought he was doing right⊠but he was in a situation where he wasnât supported.
âThere was too much confusion and not enough supervision.â
The Northern Care Alliance (NCA) NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the Royal Oldham, found Mrs Pollitt would probably have survived had the drain been removed earlier.
Its chief medical officer, Dr Rafik Bedair, said: âWeâre saddened Mrs Pollitt didnât receive the standard of care that she should have done and we remain deeply sorry to her family for this.â
He said the trust owed it to them to âlearn from what went wrong and make things safer for patients in the futureâ.
The NCA serves more than a million people across Salford, Oldham, Rochdale and Bury, as well as providing more specialist services to patients from Greater Manchester and beyond.
Following Mrs Pollittâs inquest, North Manchester Coroner Joanne Kearsley issued a Prevention of Future Deaths notice due to her concerns about PAs.
The GMC agreed patient safety was at risk without effective safeguards.
Its chief executive and registrar, Charlie Massey, said next monthâs regulatory changes would be âa vital step towards strengthening both patient safety and public trust in these professionsâ.
And he stressed it was down to employers to clearly define roles and, like âall regulated professionals, [associates] will be expected to work within their competenceâ.
But consultant anaesthetist Dr Marks warned the lack of a national scope of practice â with clear limits and standards â would still put patients at risk.
He said a lack of supervision for PAs had been a âkey featureâ in recent high-profile cases, including the death of 30-year-old woman from Salford.
âIn each one of them, had a doctor been more closely involved and seen what was going on, they would have made changes to that patientâs care,â he said.
âWhat weâre most concerned about is that youâve got a big increase in numbers of PAs who donât have the depth of understanding because of their background, and who are going to be let loose on the public without adequate supervision.â
Mr Marks was also worried about the fact that while doctors receive seven years of training, PAs receive two.
âWhat you donât know, you donât know,â he said, with PAs ânot having the skills or experienceâ to diagnose patients with varying levels of complexity.
The Academy of Royal Colleges has also called for an independent review into the use of associates because of an âincreasingly acrimonious and destructive debateâ.
A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: âOur deepest sympathies are with Susanâs family and friends.
âPatient safety is our top priority. We are urgently working with the NHS to ensure that physician associates are supporting, not replacing, doctors.â
NHS England said it had issued âupdated guidance on the appropriate deployment of medical associatesâ and would provide increased clarity about their roles.
The Pollitts stressed they did not want to blame the PA for what happened, saying he had been the âonly one who showed Susan â and us â any empathyâ.
Kate Pollitt said she only wished he had received more supervision.
âYou do get angry and upset,â she said. âBut thereâs nothing we can do for my mum now, so thereâs no point in being angry and having that bitterness for the rest of our lives.
âWe just want change â it wonât mean things like this wonât ever happen again but if we can help reduce the chances then itâs worth it.â