
Harrogate NHS Trust has paid out more than £600,000 in compensation for surgery errors since 2019, according to new figures.
Surgical errors are unexpected mistakes or accidents that occur during procedures and they are classed as ‘never events’ - as they are errors that should not have happened in surgery.
And figures obtained by Medical Negligence Assist found that, since 2019, Harrogate & District NHS Foundation Trust has had to pay out over £600k to patients who have lodged claims following a surgery error.
Medical negligence solicitor for JF Law, Gareth Lloyd, said:
“The chances of a patient suffering a surgical error are remote, yet every operation carries with it a number of risks, and if something goes wrong, there can be lifelong consequences.”
A person affected by a surgery error can often make a surgical negligence claim against the NHS, where NHS Resolution will pay for their compensation.
This is a government scheme paid for by NHS Trusts that acts as an insurance policy and pays for NHS negligence claims.
Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust employs more than 4,000 people, caring for the population in Harrogate and the local area as well as across North Yorkshire and Leeds.
In 2019/2020, 6 claims were made against the trust, the lowest number of claims over the past five years.
Three years later, this number increased to 7 claims.
The trust has experienced a rise in claims over the past year compared to 2022/23, with a total of 9.
Common errors can include foreign objects left in the body, such as surgical instruments and cleaning materials, as well as ‘wrong site surgery’, where patients can be put at a greater risk of infection and additional scarring.
Medical Negligence Assist obtained figures on how much Harrogate & District NHS Foundation Trust has paid out to successful surgical error claims since 2019.
Over the past five years, the trust has paid out a total of £607,283.
Speaking to Medical Negligence Assist, Gareth Lloyd said:
"Although they appear on the surface to be straightforward cases, surgical errors are much more complex than that and can cover a number of situations and outcomes.
“For example, an operation to remove your gallbladder carries with it risks of damage to the bile duct, blood vessels, bowel and intestines.
"If one of these complications happens during the operation, nine times out of ten, there is no case, however, that doesn’t mean that there is no case at all, it just makes it more difficult to prove.
“I once had a case involving a patient undergoing a gallbladder removal, and during the operation, one of the veins in his abdomen was damaged, which is a known risk and therefore wasn’t seen as a surgical error.
“However, when I got the medical records, it transpired that the performing surgeon had completely severed the client's hepatic artery, which isn’t a known complication, hence a successful case.”
According to figures gathered by NHS Resolution, 11,700 claims have been lodged against NHS trusts around the country for surgery errors in the past five years, with 8,753 of these claims being settled.
The government department also revealed the most frequent causes of surgery errors as well as the injuries that resulted from them.
The most common causes for surgical error claims were failures/delays for treatment, which was lodged 1,999 times, and the most common surgery error injury was unnecessary pain, seeing 1,990 claims submitted.