Hospital trust which treated Nottingham attacker trying to ‘minimise risk’ of similar incident

Senior Trust leaders say they are learning from past errors

Author: Gavin RutterPublished 8th Oct 2024
Last updated 8th Oct 2024

The NHS trust facing fierce criticism for its treatment of Nottingham attacks killer Valdo Calocane says it’s doing everything possible to minimise the risk of a future incident.

Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust missed opportunities to reduce the risk to the public while treating him for paranoid schizophrenia, a report found.

He went onto kill students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar and school caretaker Ian Coates in Nottingham city on June 13 2023.

He was later indefinitely detained at a high-security hospital.

Senior trust leaders told a meeting of Nottinghamshire County Council’s health committee on Tuesday they were learning from past errors.

However, some councillors still branded their performance ‘unsatisfactory’.

Jan Sensier, Executive Director of Partnerships and Strategy at the trust, said: “I can guarantee we’ve learnt from mistakes and are working on our systematic failures.

“We are striving to ensure mental health support will be there and in the right way. We are very confident we can put those things in place to minimise the risk.”

Diane Hull, Executive Director of Nursing and Quality, said they were working with the psychosis team who cared for Calocane, and were giving more consideration to whether people were a threat to others as well as themselves.

Work is also being done on how patients are discharged, particularly those with a similar profile to Calocane.

Committee member Councillor Johno Lee (Con) said it was “unacceptable” the trust couldn’t entirely rule out another incident happening.

“How in this day and age can people not get mental assistance?” He said.

He told both Ms Hull and Ms Sensier at the meeting: “If you were a politician, you would be out of a job.”

In response, committee chair Councillor Nigel Turner (Con) said: “We’re not far down line from tragedies. We’ve got to give the trust a fair chance to let  them improve services, and judge later.”

The Care Quality Commission watchdog is carrying out regular small-scale visits to check the trust’s progress and offer feedback.

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