logo
Consultant admits ‘flagrant breach of confidentiality' in Peggie gender dispute

Consultant admits ‘flagrant breach of confidentiality' in Peggie gender dispute

Rhyl Journal23-07-2025
Sandie Peggie was suspended after she complained about having to share a changing room with transgender medic Dr Beth Upton at Victoria Hospital, Kirkcaldy, Fife, on Christmas Eve 2023.
She was placed on special leave after Dr Upton made an allegation of bullying and harassment and cited concerns about 'patient care'.
Ms Peggie has lodged a claim against NHS Fife and Dr Upton, citing the Equality Act 2010, including sexual harassment; harassment related to a protected belief; indirect discrimination; and victimisation.
On Wednesday, consultant Dr Kate Searle admitted she sought out a witness to patient safety allegations made by Dr Upton, which occurred previously in December 2023 but were unreported.
Dr Searle sobbed when the woman was mentioned and alleged that the healthcare worker 'did not want to be involved in this for fear that, as a mixed race person, she feared Ms Peggie's views about her race would affect her going forward working in our department with Ms Peggie'.
During cross-examination by Ms Peggie's barrister, Naomi Cunningham, Dr Searle admitted she had not been subject to disciplinary proceedings for it.
Dr Searle agreed that the witness was 'the only person who was likely to be able to shed light on Dr Upton's claim that Ms Peggie refused to engage', in a resuscitation unit, however, she argued with Ms Cunningham about the woman's recollection of the incident.
Ms Cunningham said the healthcare worker 'gave a clear answer that factually contradicted Dr Upton, as she said she recalled a conversation between Beth and Sandie, although couldn't recall details', during an internal probe, the tribunal heard.
However, Dr Searle argued three times about the witness's recollection and concluded that the healthcare worker was 'contradicting herself', and said twice that she could not 'recall when it happened'.
She said she 'couldn't recall' when she spoke to the healthcare worker, and admitted sending an email to 19 consultants on December 29 2023, describing the comments allegedly made by Ms Peggie as 'questioning her (Dr Upton's) whole being' the tribunal heard.
Ms Cunningham asked if the doctor got in touch with the investigation manager to 'confess that you had left confidentiality in ruins' with an email to 19 consultants sent on December 29 2023, regarding the dispute which offered 'support' to Dr Upton and to 'condemn the actions' of Ms Peggie.
Dr Searle said: 'I did not.'
She denied attempting to 'bend the rules and transgress boundaries' by accompanying the junior doctor to an investigation meeting, and was accused by Ms Cunningham of 'turning up the temperature and increasing the emotional heat of the Datix report', the tribunal heard.
Datix is a system used in healthcare settings to report incidents and manage risk, with a view to improving care.
Dr Searle said: 'I reported it at time as I saw fit.'
Ms Cunningham said: 'If the normal rules had been followed you wouldn't have been allowed to be present for Dr Upton's interview.'
It was put to her that approaching a witness was a 'flagrant breach' of confidentiality.
Dr Searle said: 'In hindsight, yes.'
The barrister said priorities were 'surprising', and added: 'It seems you were more shocked by Sandie's refusal to play along with the pretence Dr Upton is a woman than about allegations of abandoning patients in resuscitation.'
Dr Searle said: 'We didn't initially see they were big patient safety issues but, once it was all reported, we see they are.'
She admitted adding the word 'rapist' to a Datix report although Dr Upton's account referred to a comment about prisons, the tribunal heard.
Ms Cunningham said: 'You have added the word 'rapist' to the Datix haven't you?'
Dr Searle said: 'What makes that comment so offensive and intimidating is the inference it is like Isla Bryson who is convicted male rapist, which is why its important to mention that on Datix.'
She told the tribunal: 'I would not have known what sex Dr Upton was assigned at birth.'
The consultant said she believed Ms Peggie had been cleared during a disciplinary 'due to lack of evidence', and 'believed and still do, that this was a hate incident', the tribunal heard.
The tribunal continues.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward
Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward

South Wales Guardian

time2 days ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward

Ruth Szymankiewicz was being treated for an eating disorder at Huntercombe Hospital in Berkshire and had been placed under strict one-to-one observation when on February 12 2022, an inexperienced agency worker left her on her own. The 14-year-old was able to shut herself in her bedroom at the hospital's psychiatric intensive care unit – also known as Thames ward – where she self-harmed. She died two days later at John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. It later emerged the member of staff responsible for watching Ms Szymankiewicz – a man then known as Ebo Acheampong – had never worked in a psychiatric hospital environment prior to coming to Huntercombe Hospital on February 12 for his first shift. Michelle Hancey, a support worker with 18 years' experience at Huntercombe, teared up as she told a jury inquest on Wednesday about the moment Mr Acheampong told her he 'couldn't follow' Ms Szymankiewicz on the ward – and she realised the teenage girl was alone. 'He just said to me he couldn't follow his patient and when I asked him who his patient was, and when I found out it was Ruth, I told him he needed to look for her immediately,' Ms Hancey said. Ms Szymankiewicz had been placed on the 'level three observation' plan following earlier incidents of self-harm – meaning she had to be kept within eyesight at all times on the ward. Tim Moloney KC, who represents the family, told the hearing: 'What Ruth did on the 12th of February was not out of the blue. 'Those who worked on the ward knew that Ruth would take an opportunity (to self-harm) if it was presented to her.' Mr Acheampong was asked to join the psychiatric intensive care unit on February 12 because the ward was so short-staffed nurses could not go on breaks, the inquest at Buckinghamshire Coroner's Court was previously told. Ms Hancey further told jurors that, on the morning of February 12, she had become 'upset and emotional' because of the insufficient staffing on Thames ward. 'I have raised (staffing issues) several times before this event,' Ms Hancey said, adding a lot of staff had fallen sick during that period because of exhaustion. 'There was an agreement that I should have a certain amount of staff on the ward. 'We had very difficult patients and they kept going off.' Ms Hancey filed a risk management form known as a 'Datix incident' on February 12 2022, in which she raised concerns that staff on Thames ward would 'fail to monitor patients on prescribed special observation because of staff shortage', Mr Moloney said. The inquest previously heard Mr Acheampong never returned to work at the hospital following the incident and fled the UK for Ghana. A police investigation later found he had been using false identity documents and was hired by the Platinum agency – which supplied staff for Huntercombe Hospital – under a false name. Active Care Group, which owned Huntercombe at the time of Ms Szymankiewicz's death, has since closed the facility. The inquest continues.

Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward
Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward

Powys County Times

time2 days ago

  • Powys County Times

Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward

A care worker at a children's mental health hospital broke down in tears during an inquest hearing as she recalled the moment she realised a suicidal teenage girl who should have been watched at all times had been left alone. Ruth Szymankiewicz was being treated for an eating disorder at Huntercombe Hospital in Berkshire and had been placed under strict one-to-one observation when on February 12 2022, an inexperienced agency worker left her on her own. The 14-year-old was able to shut herself in her bedroom at the hospital's psychiatric intensive care unit – also known as Thames ward – where she self-harmed. She died two days later at John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. It later emerged the member of staff responsible for watching Ms Szymankiewicz – a man then known as Ebo Acheampong – had never worked in a psychiatric hospital environment prior to coming to Huntercombe Hospital on February 12 for his first shift. Michelle Hancey, a support worker with 18 years' experience at Huntercombe, teared up as she told a jury inquest on Wednesday about the moment Mr Acheampong told her he 'couldn't follow' Ms Szymankiewicz on the ward – and she realised the teenage girl was alone. 'He just said to me he couldn't follow his patient and when I asked him who his patient was, and when I found out it was Ruth, I told him he needed to look for her immediately,' Ms Hancey said. Ms Szymankiewicz had been placed on the 'level three observation' plan following earlier incidents of self-harm – meaning she had to be kept within eyesight at all times on the ward. Tim Moloney KC, who represents the family, told the hearing: 'What Ruth did on the 12th of February was not out of the blue. 'Those who worked on the ward knew that Ruth would take an opportunity (to self-harm) if it was presented to her.' Mr Acheampong was asked to join the psychiatric intensive care unit on February 12 because the ward was so short-staffed nurses could not go on breaks, the inquest at Buckinghamshire Coroner's Court was previously told. Ms Hancey further told jurors that, on the morning of February 12, she had become 'upset and emotional' because of the insufficient staffing on Thames ward. 'I have raised (staffing issues) several times before this event,' Ms Hancey said, adding a lot of staff had fallen sick during that period because of exhaustion. 'There was an agreement that I should have a certain amount of staff on the ward. 'We had very difficult patients and they kept going off.' Ms Hancey filed a risk management form known as a 'Datix incident' on February 12 2022, in which she raised concerns that staff on Thames ward would 'fail to monitor patients on prescribed special observation because of staff shortage', Mr Moloney said. The inquest previously heard Mr Acheampong never returned to work at the hospital following the incident and fled the UK for Ghana. A police investigation later found he had been using false identity documents and was hired by the Platinum agency – which supplied staff for Huntercombe Hospital – under a false name. Active Care Group, which owned Huntercombe at the time of Ms Szymankiewicz's death, has since closed the facility. The inquest continues.

Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward
Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward

North Wales Chronicle

time2 days ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Hospital worker tears up as she recalls death of girl, 14, left alone on ward

Ruth Szymankiewicz was being treated for an eating disorder at Huntercombe Hospital in Berkshire and had been placed under strict one-to-one observation when on February 12 2022, an inexperienced agency worker left her on her own. The 14-year-old was able to shut herself in her bedroom at the hospital's psychiatric intensive care unit – also known as Thames ward – where she self-harmed. She died two days later at John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. It later emerged the member of staff responsible for watching Ms Szymankiewicz – a man then known as Ebo Acheampong – had never worked in a psychiatric hospital environment prior to coming to Huntercombe Hospital on February 12 for his first shift. Michelle Hancey, a support worker with 18 years' experience at Huntercombe, teared up as she told a jury inquest on Wednesday about the moment Mr Acheampong told her he 'couldn't follow' Ms Szymankiewicz on the ward – and she realised the teenage girl was alone. 'He just said to me he couldn't follow his patient and when I asked him who his patient was, and when I found out it was Ruth, I told him he needed to look for her immediately,' Ms Hancey said. Ms Szymankiewicz had been placed on the 'level three observation' plan following earlier incidents of self-harm – meaning she had to be kept within eyesight at all times on the ward. Tim Moloney KC, who represents the family, told the hearing: 'What Ruth did on the 12th of February was not out of the blue. 'Those who worked on the ward knew that Ruth would take an opportunity (to self-harm) if it was presented to her.' Mr Acheampong was asked to join the psychiatric intensive care unit on February 12 because the ward was so short-staffed nurses could not go on breaks, the inquest at Buckinghamshire Coroner's Court was previously told. Ms Hancey further told jurors that, on the morning of February 12, she had become 'upset and emotional' because of the insufficient staffing on Thames ward. 'I have raised (staffing issues) several times before this event,' Ms Hancey said, adding a lot of staff had fallen sick during that period because of exhaustion. 'There was an agreement that I should have a certain amount of staff on the ward. 'We had very difficult patients and they kept going off.' Ms Hancey filed a risk management form known as a 'Datix incident' on February 12 2022, in which she raised concerns that staff on Thames ward would 'fail to monitor patients on prescribed special observation because of staff shortage', Mr Moloney said. The inquest previously heard Mr Acheampong never returned to work at the hospital following the incident and fled the UK for Ghana. A police investigation later found he had been using false identity documents and was hired by the Platinum agency – which supplied staff for Huntercombe Hospital – under a false name. Active Care Group, which owned Huntercombe at the time of Ms Szymankiewicz's death, has since closed the facility. The inquest continues.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store