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Who Do We Not Save?

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Manage episode 371390821 series 2639742
Content provided by Mark Honigsbaum and Mark Honigsbaum / Zinc Media. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Honigsbaum and Mark Honigsbaum / Zinc Media or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

As the UK’s independent public inquiry into Covid-19 gets underway, members of the Covid bereaved complain that they are not being given an opportunity to testify.

Today, in the second part of our two-part special, Mark speaks to the parents of Susan Sullivan, a woman with Down's Syndrome who died of Covid-19 at Barnet General Hospital on March 28, 2020, after being deemed “not for resuscitation” and he reveals the findings of a confidential investigation by the Royal Free NHS Hospital Trust into her death. The report, which makes for shocking reading, found that Susan was not seen by a consultant until 20 hours after admission to Barnet’s Accident and Emergency department and that the fact that she had Down’s Syndrome and had been fitted with a pacemaker should not have excluded her from intensive care.

Mark also speaks to Kamran Mallick, the CEO of Disability Rights UK, about what the Sullivan case reveals about the pattern of discrimination experienced by people with learning disabilities across the NHS, and to Dominic Wilkinson, a medical ethicist, who explains the challenge to doctors of weighing the harms and benefits of invasive procedures to patients.

Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

With:

John and Ida Sullivan

www.covidfamiliesforjustice.org / @CovidJusticeuk

Kamran Mallick, CEO of Disability Rights UK.

www.disabilityrights.uk / @KamranMallick

Professor Dominic Wilkinson

@NeonatalEthics

Professor of Medical Ethics and Director of Medical Ethics at the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. Dominic is also a Consultant Neonatologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital and a Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College.

www.jesus.ox.ac.uk/about-jesus-college/our-community/people/professor-dominic-wilkinson/

Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

Blog: markhonigsbaum.substack.com

This episode of Going Viral has been produced with the support of a grant from the Higher Education Innovation Fund at City, University of London. It is part of the project, “Commemorating Covid, Remembering Pandemics”, www.rememberingpandemics.com

If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  continue reading

33 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 371390821 series 2639742
Content provided by Mark Honigsbaum and Mark Honigsbaum / Zinc Media. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mark Honigsbaum and Mark Honigsbaum / Zinc Media or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

As the UK’s independent public inquiry into Covid-19 gets underway, members of the Covid bereaved complain that they are not being given an opportunity to testify.

Today, in the second part of our two-part special, Mark speaks to the parents of Susan Sullivan, a woman with Down's Syndrome who died of Covid-19 at Barnet General Hospital on March 28, 2020, after being deemed “not for resuscitation” and he reveals the findings of a confidential investigation by the Royal Free NHS Hospital Trust into her death. The report, which makes for shocking reading, found that Susan was not seen by a consultant until 20 hours after admission to Barnet’s Accident and Emergency department and that the fact that she had Down’s Syndrome and had been fitted with a pacemaker should not have excluded her from intensive care.

Mark also speaks to Kamran Mallick, the CEO of Disability Rights UK, about what the Sullivan case reveals about the pattern of discrimination experienced by people with learning disabilities across the NHS, and to Dominic Wilkinson, a medical ethicist, who explains the challenge to doctors of weighing the harms and benefits of invasive procedures to patients.

Presented by Mark Honigsbaum @honigsbaum

With:

John and Ida Sullivan

www.covidfamiliesforjustice.org / @CovidJusticeuk

Kamran Mallick, CEO of Disability Rights UK.

www.disabilityrights.uk / @KamranMallick

Professor Dominic Wilkinson

@NeonatalEthics

Professor of Medical Ethics and Director of Medical Ethics at the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. Dominic is also a Consultant Neonatologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital and a Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College.

www.jesus.ox.ac.uk/about-jesus-college/our-community/people/professor-dominic-wilkinson/

Series Producer: Melissa FitzGerald @Melissafitzg

Cover art by Patrick Blower www.blowercartoons.com

Follow us on Twitter: @GoingViral_pod

Follow us on Instagram: goingviral_thepodcast

Blog: markhonigsbaum.substack.com

This episode of Going Viral has been produced with the support of a grant from the Higher Education Innovation Fund at City, University of London. It is part of the project, “Commemorating Covid, Remembering Pandemics”, www.rememberingpandemics.com

If you enjoy our podcast - please leave us a rating or review. Thank you!

  continue reading

33 episodes

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