logo
Surgeon who caused harm has suspension extended

Surgeon who caused harm has suspension extended

Yahoo06-02-2025

A surgeon who was found to have caused harm to hundreds of people has been suspended for a further six months.
A tribunal heard how Tony Dixon left patients in "agony" after using artificial mesh to treat prolapsed bowels at Southmead Hospital, in Bristol, and the Spire Hospital.
The Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service suspended Mr Dixon for six months in July 2024, and on Thursday announced a further extension until September.
"I am satisfied that a period of suspension is proportionate and would be sufficient to protect the public and the public interest," Ms Morag Rae, the legally qualified chair of the tribunal, said in a letter.
Mr Dixon was also previously found to have failed to obtain informed consent or trial alternative treatment and not to have adequately investigated symptoms.
The General Medical Council brought the case against Mr Dixon, who previously denied all the allegations.
The tribunal came after an investigation by the BBC and a review by Southmead Hospital, which found more than 200 patients were harmed after Mr Dixon operated on them unnecessarily.
The BBC first revealed allegations made against Mr Dixon in 2017, when many women complained of severe pain following their operations.
Ms Rae's letter continued: "Dr Dixon's misconduct was serious, it encompassed several patients and involved significant failures to appropriately communicate key aspects relevant to consent.
"The tribunal considered that public confidence in the profession would be undermined if a finding of impairment were not made."
Follow BBC Bristol on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630.
Suspended surgeon harmed hundreds of women
Mesh surgeon investigated by NHS trust
Tribunal rules after surgeon left women in agony
Surgeon defends not waking patient for consent
Medical Practioners Tribunal Service

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

World-first blood cancer therapy to be given on NHS
World-first blood cancer therapy to be given on NHS

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

World-first blood cancer therapy to be given on NHS

A "Trojan horse" therapy that sneaks toxic drugs inside cancer cells is being made available on the NHS in England in a world first. It can halt the blood cancer myeloma for nearly three times longer than current therapies. The drug is an advanced form of chemotherapy that hits cancer with a bigger dose, while reducing side-effects. Paul Silvester, one of the first people to get it, says the therapy has been "life-changing" and he's now planning history-themed adventures. Myeloma – also known as multiple myeloma – affects part of the immune system called plasma cells. These are made in the spongey bone marrow in the centre of our bones. Paul, who is 60 and from Sheffield, was diagnosed nearly two years ago after the cancer led to broken bones in his back. He had a bone marrow transplant last year, but relapsed around Christmas. He has since been on the new therapy – called belantamab mafodotin – as part of an early access scheme. Within weeks he was in remission. Other treatments could have left him isolating in his bedroom for months, so Paul says the therapy "is absolutely life-changing" and was "creating that opportunity to enjoy" life. Visiting Hadrian's Wall is next on the agenda for history buff Paul; and he's looking forward to one of his daughters graduating later this year. "Most people say 'you look really really well'... I have a good normal life," he told the BBC. Paul's therapy - belantamab mafodotin – is a lethal chemotherapy drug that has been bound to an antibody, similar to the ones the body uses to fight infection. However, these antibodies have been designed to spot markings on the outside of plasma cells. So they travel to cancerous cells, stick to the surface and are then absorbed. Once inside they release their toxic payload, to kill the cancer. The therapy is named Trojan horse therapy after the siege of the city of Troy in Greek mythology, when a giant wooden horse was used to smuggle soldiers into the city. Myeloma cannot be cured, but clinical trials last year showed the Trojan horse therapy halted the cancer for three years, compared to 13 months with current therapies. Prof Peter Johnson, the national clinical director for cancer at NHS England, said the difference was "life-changing". He told me: "This is a really important development for people with myeloma, because although we may not be able to cure the illness, giving them time free of the disease and free of the symptoms is really important. "We've seen in the last few years that using antibodies to deliver chemotherapy drugs directly into cells can make a big difference for a variety of different types of cancer." Around 33,000 people are living with myeloma in the UK. The new drug will be used when the first-choice therapy fails, so around 1,500 patients a year could benefit. The decision comes after a review by the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE) concluded the drug was cost-effective for NHS use. NICE recommendations are normally adopted in England, Wales and Northern Ireland while Scotland has its own process. The therapy is kinder than other cancer treatments, but is not free from side-effects. After a cancer cell has been destroyed, the remaining chemotherapy drug will leak into the body. This can cause dry eyes and blurred vision. The technical name for these drugs is an antibody-drug-conjugate. This therapy was developed by GSK in the UK with early research taking place in Stevenage and the first clinical trials in London. Prof Martin Kaiser, team leader in myeloma molecular therapy at the Institute of Cancer Research, said these "are very smart drugs" and the difference in side effects compared to other drugs "is really remarkable". While myeloma is still considered an incurable cancer, Prof Kaiser says drugs like this are "an important step towards a functional cure" and he thinks long-term remission will go "above 50% in the next five years". Antibody drug conjugates are being developed for a range of cancers. The limitation is being able to design an antibody that can target the cancer alone. There is one that can target some types of breast cancer. Research is already taking place on stomach and bowel cancer. Shelagh McKinlay, from the charity Myeloma UK, said the approval would "transform the lives of thousands" and it was "fantastic to see the UK at the forefront of myeloma treatment". Health Minister Karin Smyth, said: "This ground-breaking therapy puts the NHS at the forefront of cancer innovation." Exercise improves colon cancer survival, major study shows Breakthrough cancer drug doubles survival in trial

Starvation alert as children fill Kenya refugee ward after US aid cuts
Starvation alert as children fill Kenya refugee ward after US aid cuts

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Starvation alert as children fill Kenya refugee ward after US aid cuts

Hundreds of thousands of people are "slowly starving" in Kenyan refugee camps after US funding cuts reduced food rations to their lowest ever levels, a United Nations official has told the BBC. The impact is starkly visible at a hospital in the sprawling Kakuma camp in the north-west of the East African nation. It is home to roughly 300,000 refugees who have fled strife in countries across Africa and the Middle East. Emaciated children fill a 30-bed ward at Kakuma's Amusait Hospital, staring blankly at visitors as they receive treatment for severe acute malnutrition. One baby, Hellen, barely moves. Parts of her skin are wrinkled and peeling, leaving angry patches of red - the result of malnutrition, a medic tells the BBC. Across the aisle lies a nine-month-old baby, James, the eighth child of Agnes Awila, a refugee from northern Uganda. "The food is not enough, my children eat only once a day. If there's no food what do you feed them?" she asks. James, Hellen and thousands of other refugees in Kakuma depend on the UN's World Food Programme (WFP) for vital sustenance. But the agency had to drastically reduce its aid operations in many countries after President Donald Trump announced sweeping cuts to US foreign aid programmes earlier this year, as part of his "America First" policy. The US had provided around 70% of the funding for the WFP's operations in Kenya. The WFP says that as a result of the cuts, the agency has had to slash the refugees' rations to 30% of the minimum recommended amount a person should eat to stay healthy. "If we have a protracted situation where this is what we can manage, then basically we have a slowly starving population," says Felix Okech, the WFP's head of refugee operations in Kenya. Outside Kakuma's food distribution centre, the sun beats down on the dry, dusty ground and security officers manage queues of refugees. They are led into a holding centre and then a verification area. Aid workers scan the refugees' identity cards and take their fingerprints, before taking them to collect their rations. Mukuniwa Bililo Mami, a mother of two, has brought a jerrycan to collect cooking oil, along with sacks for lentils and rice. "I am grateful to receive this little [food] but it is not enough," says the 51-year-old, who arrived in the camp 13 years ago from South Kivu, a region in conflict-hit eastern Democratic Republic of Congo Ms Mami says the refugees used to "eat well" - three meals a day. But now that rations are at 30% of their usual amount, the food she has been given is not enough to last one month, let alone the two that she has been asked to stretch it for. She has also been affected by another casualty of the cuts - cash transfers. Until this year, the UN was giving around $4m (£3m) in cash directly to refugees in Kenya's camps each month, intended to allow families to buy basic supplies. Ms Mami, who is diabetic, used the cash to buy food, like vegetables, which were more appropriate for her diet than the cereals handed out at the distribution centre. Now, she is forced to eat whatever is available. She also used the money to start a vegetable garden and rear chicken and ducks, which she sold to other refugees, at a market. But the discontinuation of the cash transfers, locally known as "bamba chakula", has meant that the market faces collapse. Traders like Badaba Ibrahim, who is from the Nuba Mountains in Sudan, are no longer able to extend lines of credit to fellow refugees. The 42-year-old runs a retail shop in the local shopping centre. He says his customers, now unable to purchase food, at times camp at his shop all day, begging for help. "They will tell you, 'My children have not eaten for a full day,'" Mr Ibrahim says. Elsewhere in the Kakuma camp, 28-year-old Agnes Livio serves up food for her five young sons. They live in a cubicle, which is roughly 2m (6ft 6in) by 2m made from corrugated iron sheets. Ms Livio serves the food on one large plate for all to share. It is the family's first meal of the day - at 1400. "We used to get porridge for breakfast but not anymore. So, the children have to wait until the afternoon to have their first meal," says Ms Livio, who fled from South Sudan. Back at Amusait Hospital, medics are feeding a number of malnourished infants through tubes. Three toddlers and their mothers are being discharged - back to the community where food is scarce and conditions are deteriorating. And the prospect of more funding is not very promising and unless things change over the next two months, the refugees are staring at starvation come August. "It is a really dire situation," admits Mr Okeck. "We do have some signals from some one or two donors about support with that cash component. "But remember, the very kind and generous US has been providing over 70% - so if you're still missing 70%… those prospects are not good." 'My wife fears sex, I fear death' - impacts of the USAID freeze Africa is important to Trump, despite aid cuts, envoy tells BBC] Nigeria and Kenya among nations running out of HIV drugs - WHO How Trump locked out contraception in Africa Go to for more news from the African continent. Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica Focus on Africa This Is Africa

'I made the sign of victory for Siwar': Mother's relief as malnourished Gaza baby evacuated to Jordan
'I made the sign of victory for Siwar': Mother's relief as malnourished Gaza baby evacuated to Jordan

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

'I made the sign of victory for Siwar': Mother's relief as malnourished Gaza baby evacuated to Jordan

The cry was frail but I could hear Siwar Ashour even before she was carried out of the coach. It was the cry of a voice that won't give up, of a child born in this war and who has now, for a while at least, managed to escape it. In person six-month-old Siwar is tinier than any visual image can convey. She weighs 3kg (6.6lb) but should be twice that. Her mother, Najwa, 23, smiled as she described her feelings on crossing into Jordan on Wednesday, when her daughter was evacuated from Gaza with other Palestinian children. The first thing she noticed was the quiet. "It feels like there is a truce," she told me. "We will spend our night without rockets and bombing with God's will." Siwar was also accompanied by her grandmother Reem and her father Saleh who is blind. "The first and last goal of this trip is Siwar," said Saleh. "We want to get her to a safe shore. I want to make sure she is safe and cured. She's my daughter, my own flesh and blood. And I'm so deeply worried about her." It was Reem who carried Siwar off the bus onto Jordanian soil, forming her fingers into a V sign as she came. "Until now I can't believe that I have arrived in Jordan. I saw King's Abdullah's photo at the border and I felt so happy I got off the bus and made the sign of victory…for the sake of Siwar." Back in April when the BBC first filmed Siwar at Nasser hospital in southern Gaza, her mother and doctor said she was suffering from malnutrition because the special milk formula she needed could not be found in sufficient quantity. Her body was emaciated. Najwa said then she could not breastfeed Siwar because she herself was suffering from malnutrition. Tins of milk formula were found and delivered by the Jordanian Field hospital and by private fundraisers. But with an Israeli blockade on aid, which was partially eased three weeks ago, and an escalating military offensive it was clear Siwar's condition needed more comprehensive testing and treatment. In a deal announced between King Abdullah and US President Donald Trump in February, Jordan offered to bring 2000 seriously ill children to Amman for treatment. Gaza's devastated medical system cannot cope with the level of sickness and war wounded. Since March, 57 children along with 113 family escorts have been evacuated. Sixteen children came on Wednesday, including Siwar. Cradled in her grandmother's arms, Siwar stared with her large eyes at the unfamiliar crowds of police, medical workers, and journalists gathered on the border. She was taken to an air conditioned hall where Jordanian medics handed out drinks and food to the children. There was peace and plenty. What was most obvious was the exhaustion of parents and children alike. In several months of covering these evacuations this latest was the most striking in terms of a sense of communal trauma. All of these families know what it is to be driven from one area to another by Israeli evacuation orders, or to queue for hours in the hope of finding food. If they have not experienced death in their family, they will definitely know friends or relatives who have been killed. Families are often separated by conflict as parents search for food or medical treatment. One day Najwa took Siwar to hospital and that was the last time husband Saleh was with them for two months. "I thought she would be gone for just three or four days and then come back, a simple treatment and she'd return," he recalled. "But I was shocked that it dragged on and took so long…and eventually I realised that her condition is very serious and difficult." We travelled from the border to Amman with Siwar and her family. Najwa is pregnant and fell into a deep sleep. Siwar remained awake in her grandmother's arms. On the same ambulance were two boys suffering from cancer, along with their mothers and two younger siblings. One of the siblings, a boy of four, cried constantly. He was tired and scared. After an hour we reached Amman and Siwar was transferred into the arms of a nurse and then to another ambulance. Over the next few days she will be tested and given the kind of treatment that is simply impossible under current conditions in Gaza. And her mother, father and grandmother - those who watch over her - will sleep without fear. WIth additional reporting by Alice Doyard, Suha Kawar, Mark Goddard and Malaak Hassouneh. 'Situation is dire' - BBC returns to Gaza baby left hungry by Israeli blockade 'No food when I gave birth': Malnutrition rises in Gaza as Israeli blockade enters third month Gaza now worse than hell on earth, humanitarian chief tells BBC

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store