The death of Connor Sparrowhawk in 2013 resulted in the publication of the ‘Mazars Report’ (December 2015) which uncovered serious concerns regarding systems of mortality review and management at the Southern Health NHS Trust between April 2011 and March 2015.
In response, the Care Quality Commission (CQC) published a report, ‘Learning, candour and accountability; a review of the way NHS trusts review and investigate the deaths of patients in England’ in December 2016. It showed that in some organisations, learning from deaths was not being given sufficient priority and that valuable opportunities for improvements were being missed.
In its review, the CQC made a number of recommendations about how the approach to learning from deaths could be standardised across the NHS. In March 2017, the National Quality Board published the first edition of the ‘National Guidance on Learning from Deaths’, a framework for the NHS on how it could improve identifying, reporting, investigating and learning from deaths in care. One of the key requirements for Trusts was to publish a policy on how it responds to, and learns from, deaths of patients who die under its management and care.
In September 2019 guidance was finally published on the statutory introduction of Medical Examiners. This role will contribute towards quality assurance and help improve the accuracy of death certification, giving the family of the bereaved support and a formal opportunity to raise concerns while ensuring that the period after death is as problem-free as possible. The role will also identify and support local learning processes from a Trust and family perspective.
Learning from Deaths
The Trust Mortality Review and Learning from Deaths Policy provides a consistent and coordinated framework for the review of deaths, which maximises learning and improvement of care.
Following the findings of the Care Quality Commission report Learning, candour and accountability: A review of the way NHS trusts review and investigate the deaths of patients in England, the National Quality Board published the first edition of National Guidance on Learning from Deaths for Trusts.
Q2 and Q3 Mortality Report
Q1 Mortality Report
The Mortality Review Group ensures the Trust has appropriate systems for the monitoring and reporting of mortality performance at that the Board understands the significance and impact of different mortality measures. It also shares the findings and learning from mortality reviews so that local practices are clinically effective and safe for patients.
The purpose of the Mortality Review Group is to:
NEQOS provides and independent quality measurement service for NHS organisations subject to a subscription arrangement. They provide expert analysis in a range of core and bespoke projects.
NEQOS Website
Hospital Mortality Quarterly Report 53
Hosptial Mortality Quarterly Report 52
Hospital Mortality Quarterly Report 51
Hospital Mortality Quarterly Report 50
Learning, candour and accountability: A review of the way NHS trusts review and investigate the deaths of patients in England
Learning from death: Guidance for Trusts working with bereaved families and carers