PHSO

Listening and Learning:

The Ombudsman’s review of complaint handling by the NHS in England 2011-12

Mr F and the nurse had different recollections of what happened  during the appointments, and Mr F was concerned that some of the records had  been altered. We decided that the only way to resolve the complaint would be to  check the audit trail for the electronic records.

The audit revealed that, following Mr F’s complaint to the  Practice, the nurse had retrospectively altered Mr F’s computer records. This  was more than two years after the events occurred. Some of the existing entries  had been deleted and replaced with a different version, which said that Mr F  had been offered and then refused treatment and a referral to a specialist –  something that Mr F vehemently denied. The nurse had also created some new  entries for appointments that were not recorded at the time. We interviewed the  nurse. She was unable to provide a plausible explanation for the alteration of  the records.

We found service failure and that an injustice arose to Mr F in  consequence of it.  We therefore made  recommendations to the Practice, which included an apology, £500 compensation,  an addendum to Mr F’s records to show what had been altered, and an action plan  describing what had been learnt. 

Given the seriousness of what we found the nurse had done, we  also shared our concerns about the nurse’s behaviour with the Nursing and  Midwifery Council, in line with our powers to share information in the  interests of the health and safety of patients.