Serious failures in standards of care at Stafford General Hospital
are evidence that the "marketisation of the health service has gone too
far", two bishops have warned.
The Bishop of Lichfield, the Right Reverend Jonathan Gledhill, and
the Bishop of Stafford, the Right Reverend Geoff Annas, made the
comments in the Church Times in response to an inquiry into the death of
66-year-old Gillian Astbury at the hospital in 2007.
The inquiry found that hundreds of patients had died as a result of
poor levels of care. Police are now considerating whether to bring
criminal charges against staff at the NHS hospital.
Bishop Gledhill said the investigation into the hospital had been a
"long and terrible time for the people of Stafford", particularly the
relatives of those who had died "unnecessarily and suffered".
He said people should "not be afraid to go to their local hospital",
but also expressed sympathy for NHS workers who have "borne the weight
of cuts and reductions".
"We have now seen what many of us suspected - that the marketisation of the health service has gone too far," he said.
He called for a return to the Christian values that inspired the creation of the NHS.
"This Christian basis has been weakened in recent years and covering the bottom line has become all important."
Bishop Annas expressed his sympathy for those affected by the "horrific" failings.
"Their legacy and memorial must be an NHS that puts patients’ wellbeing before all other considerations," he said. "There has been enormous soul-searching among staff at Stafford
Hospital. I hope the future sees a return to patient-centred management
that puts caring for people and enabling staff to raise concerns above
administration."