Ombudsman shines a light on service failures across the public sector

30 Apr 2021 11:32 AM

Too many people who complain about public service failures are not getting the answers they need and are being forced to bring their unresolved complaints to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO).

PHSO has begun to routinely publish its investigations. This includes cases where serious mistakes have been made and not readily admitted nor addressed so vital improvements have been delayed.

Incidents of avoidable death, delayed cancer diagnosis, and an ambulance being five hours late are among the upheld complaints published on the website.

These cases provide valuable learning for the NHS in England and Government bodies by showing what needs to change to help prevent the same mistakes happening again.

Rob Behrens, Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman, yesterday said:

‘Most public sector organisations deliver an excellent service day in and day out, but it’s essential that lessons are learnt when mistakes are made.

‘It’s not about blame or pointing the finger but listening to feedback and acknowledging what went wrong.

‘Today we begin the routine publication of our casework which will make our findings much more accessible to the NHS in England and Government bodies and help drive improvements in their services.’

PHSO yesterday published 15 cases closed between June 2020 to January 2021. These are a mix of upheld, partly upheld and not upheld complaints showcasing the breadth of their investigative work.

The cases include:

PHSO will continue to regularly publish cases on the second and fourth Wednesday of each month - the next publication date is Wednesday 12 May 2021.

Anyone can easily search for investigation reports by entering key words such as ‘cancer’, ‘diagnosis’, and ‘death’, as well as by organisation such as the name of a hospital trust.

PHSO will shortly be adding a new email sign-up system so you can get alerts when new cases are published. You can follow them on Twitter for updates.