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WEEKLY BULLETIN: 20 FEBRUARY 2015

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Medical negligence costs ‘threat’ to National Health<br />

Service<br />

A soaring bill from medical negligence damages has become a threat to the National Health<br />

Service, says one of the most senior business figures in Whitehall. He said there was a<br />

question as to whether patients should lose their right to sue. The NHS Litigation<br />

Authority, which provides indemnity cover for legal claims against the health service, has<br />

set aside £26.1bn to cover outstanding liabilities, equivalent to almost a quarter of the<br />

£113bn annual health budget: £1.6bn was paid out last year. The number of claims rose<br />

almost 18 per cent in the year from March <strong>20</strong>13. Jeremy Hunt, the health secretary, will<br />

on Wednesday announce financial sanctions for hospitals that fail to be honest about<br />

clinical mistakes, in a sign of growing concern about compensation costs.<br />

Read the full article at http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f4da10f6-a255-11e4-9630-<br />

00144feab7de.html#axzz3S6NNZtrG<br />

Delhi govt asked to pay Rs 8L for medical negligence at<br />

LNJP<br />

New Delhi: The apex consumer commission has asked the Delhi government to pay over<br />

Rs 8 lakh to the kin of a 46-year-old man who died due to "gross negligence" at the staterun<br />

LNJP hospital while being subjected to radiotherapy. A bench of National Consumer<br />

Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC), presided by Justice D K Jain, asked the Delhi<br />

government to pay Rs 8.25 lakh to the wife and three children of Ghaziabad resident<br />

Ramveer Singh, who died in October <strong>20</strong>04. Read the full article at<br />

http://zeenews.india.com/news/delhi/delhi-govt-asked-to-pay-rs-8l-for-medicalnegligence-at-lnjp_1538142.html<br />

Liberia's Ebola human waste dilemma<br />

In Liberia, new infections of the Ebola virus have dropped to one-tenth from levels seen<br />

when the virus was at its peak. The country recently reopened its border with Sierra Leone<br />

and lifted its nationwide curfews after several months of closure. But the country still has<br />

the problem of what to do with huge quantities of potentially infectious human waste. Read<br />

the full article at http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-31599134

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