The father of a man with learning difficulties who died in NHS care has accused health secretary Patricia Hewitt of trying to dodge the truth about his son’s death which was highlighted in a Mencap report.
Allen Cannon, whose 30-year-old son Mark died two months after being admitted to hospital with a broken leg, met Hewitt this week along with five other families whose relatives with learning difficulties also died in NHS care.
The families’ cases were the focus of Mencap’s report, Death by Indifference, http://www.mencap.org.uk/html/campaigns/deathbyindifference/index.asp earlier this month.
Dame Jo Williams, chief executive of Mencap, who also attended the meeting with Hewitt, said: “We need to state clearly that the lessons that need to be learned so no-one else ever has to go through this.”
After Mencap’s report, the government admitted there was “systemic indifference” towards people with learning difficulties in the health service and announced an independent inquiry into the six deaths.
Mencap urges learning disability checks for mainstream NHS
26 June 2008
Healthcare Commission announces fresh learning disabilities probe
19 June 2008
Jersey kids' home pits probe
17 April 2008
News round up: Jersey kids' home pits probe
17 April 2008
Skills for Care unveils study of direct payment users as employers
Tributes flow in for Ray Wyre after death at 56
640,000 council staff to strike on 16 and 17 July
Details of government consultations
04 July 2008
Government Legislation
04 July 2008
Private Member Bills
04 July 2008