The audit conducted by the Private Healthcare Information Network (PHIN), established in 2014 to bring greater transparency to the private health sector, showed that 287 out of 595 private hospitals and NHS private patient units (PPUs) provided information on Never Events between 1 January and 31 December 2019.
There were 21 “wholly preventable” patient safety incidents of the most serious category at private hospitals last year, new data has shown, as NHS bosses prepare to invest up to £10bn in the sector.
This is the first time that a comprehensive dataset of so-called ‘Never Events’ within private hospitals has been published in the UK, and comes ahead of plans to outsource both inpatient and outpatient services, routine surgery operations and cancer treatment to private providers.
This group accounts for an estimated 86 per cent of privately-funded admitted patient care, PHIN said. It attributed the “gaps in the data” to NHS PPUs, rather than independent hospitals.
The fact that more than 300 hospitals or PPUs were unable or unwilling to hand over this data highlights the private sector’s continuing lack of transparency, said the Centre for Health and the Public Interest, a social care and health think tank.
The Royal College of Surgeons said the data shone a “welcome light” on the independent sector but insisted that “we need to see more private providers contributing information of this kind”.
PHIN’s findings showed that out of the 21 reported Never Events, 11 of these involved the placement of an implant or prosthesis different from that specified in the procedural plan.
Five were recorded as ‘Wrong site surgery’, meaning patients were operated on an incorrect part of their body.
Other reported Never Events included ‘Retained foreign object post procedure,’ ‘Mis-selection of a strong potassium solution,’ and ‘Administration of medication by the wrong route’.
PHIN said that some of these events will have culminated in patient harm, though the data does not provide detail on this.
Equivalent data from NHS Improvement showed there were 496 reported Never Events in the public sector between 1 April 2018 and 31 March 2019, the majority of which were identified as ‘Wrong site surgery’.
The NHS Improvement definition of a Never Event says that such incidents “are wholly preventable where guidance or safety recommendations that provide strong systemic protective barriers are available at a national level and have been implemented by healthcare providers.”
Dr Andrew Vallance-Owen, chair of PHIN, said the new data will “be helpful for patients when deciding the right provider for their care, but it is also important that the information is available to hospitals, consultants and others within the sector.”
“Never Events have to be reported so that that lessons are learnt and actions taken to ensure they cannot happen again,” he said.
“This means that the reporting, investigation and learning is a powerful safety ‘call to action’ in itself and should always leads to an improvement in processes and quality of care as a result.”