Innocent Murder ; The Trial of Sister Jessie McTavish, Edinburgh 1974 (Four Scots Trials Book 2)

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Innocent Murder ; The Trial of Sister Jessie McTavish, Edinburgh 1974 (Four Scots Trials Book 2)

Innocent Murder ; The Trial of Sister Jessie McTavish, Edinburgh 1974 (Four Scots Trials Book 2)

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The police investigation highlighted that results of blood gas analysers written in the clinical notes did not match data held on Radiance (part of the electronic patient record). That is, doctors/nurses and hospital management, believing Ben to be guilty of deliberately trying to harm this patient then tried to find evidence to support this view and believed they had found it by unearthing records of other patients who had died at the hospital when Ben was on duty. There are different types of “politics” behind incidences of death in the medical arena, including a culture endorsing collective lying. Nobody really knows what motivated Shipman, much the same as we don't know what motivated Colin Norris," he said.

He was apprehended after staff at the hospital noticed that it was always when he treated patients, most of whom only had minor injuries such as dislocated shoulders, that they inexplicably had respiratory failures. But it was the lecture about a 30-year-old case involving Glasgow nurse Jessie McTavish – who was jailed for life in 1974 for murdering a patient by administering an insulin overdose – that seemed to stick in his mind. The concern must be a genuine concern about a crime, criminal offence, miscarriage of justice, dangers to health and safety and of the environment – And the cover up of any of these. These adverts enable local businesses to get in front of their target audience – the local community.He had arrived at this figure erroneously by squaring 1 in 8500, as being the likelihood of a cot death in similar circumstances. It is important that we continue to promote these adverts as our local businesses need as much support as possible during these challenging times. Doctors may have said things to family (for example, ‘… he/ she is doing well, should go home next week’) when they really meant: ‘… this is close to the end, nothing more we can do, better to die at home’. So I really do get why the doctors, consultants and coroner would try their best to avoid it if they could.

NHS and Social Care employees that have complaints regarding pay, hours, bullying (unless as a direct result of whistleblowing) and general grievances would need to raise their complaints using their organisations grievance procedure. They check each one for any sign of involvement of the scary nurse and if he’s involved the incident quickly takes on a very sinister look. Jesse drew technique and knowledge from talented chefs that crossed his path, and with that knowledge and love for ingredients, he moved back to South East Queensland and opened his first business, a delicatessen. So taking these two things together – the rapid and inexplicable deterioration of a relatively young patient which led to mistakes being made and Ben having been alone with the patient just before that deterioration – putting him in the frame as to the “cause” of the deterioration. Three appeals court judges said that while there was ample evidence to support the conviction, [6] the McTavish's legal team's successful argument—that the judge, Lord Robertson, had inadvertently misled the jury—would prevail.Once suspicion was directed at the nurses, every unexpected event occurring while they were on duty tended to be attributed to them, without sufficient effort being made to discover alternative causes. Ben Geen’s case is very similar to those of his fellow UK nurse, Colin Norris (also jailed for 30 years). Anyway a lot of the information in the dossiers is wrong, corrupted; misclassifications galore, important documents are lost, important forms never got filled in properly. A whistleblower is a person who raises a concern about a wrongdoing in their workplace or within the NHS or social care setting.

Perhaps he felt he was releasing them from a state that he considered worse than death, relishing the power to grant life or death. Remember the t-shirt ‘Join the British Army: go to interesting places, meet interesting people, and kill them‘?Mr Gregg added: "Norris is not only a dangerous criminal but cunning in his actions, choosing times to commit his crimes carefully – being either early in the morning or at weekends when he knew senior and specialist staffs were not routinely on duty.



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