Source · SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman)

Lothian NHS Board

SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman) Partly Upheld Reference 201507463 Sector Health Category clinical treatment / diagnosis Decided 01 June 2016

View NHS Lothian scorecard

Full decision

Summary

Mr C complained that he sustained damage around his knee after surgery at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. He also raised a concern that, after reporting pain and clicking in his knee some years later, a neurophysiologist (a medical professional specialised in the function of the nervous system) at the Western General Hospital should have referred him for nerve conduction tests (studies to check for abnormalities in the nerves). Mr C also complained that an orthopaedic surgeon at St John's Hospital did not refer him in a timely manner to physiotherapy and to the orthopaedic surgeon who had carried out his original surgery. Mr C was dissatisfied with the lack of communication in relation to his care and with the board's handling of his complaint.

We took independent advice from two consultant medical advisers, one specialised in orthopaedic surgery and the other in neurophysiology. We found no evidence that Mr C's surgery at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh was unreasonable although the consent procedure fell below a reasonable standard. We agreed that nerve conduction tests would not have provided anything further in the management of Mr C's care some years after the surgery and that this was evident when such tests were carried out and no abnormality was found. We did not consider that the orthopaedic surgeon had delayed unreasonably in referring Mr C to physiotherapy or to the surgeon who had carried out the knee surgery. Whilst we concluded that communication with Mr C about his care appeared reasonable overall, we upheld Mr C's complaint that the board failed to adhere to his request for electronic communication during their investigation of his complaint, and we made recommendations to the board.

Recommendations

We recommended that the board: ensure that their current consent forms prompt the clinician to record that the advantages and risks of surgery have been discussed with the patient; apologise to Mr C for failing to adhere to his request for electronic communication; review the wording of their electronic information consent form to ensure that it is not contradictory; and take steps to ensure that patients' requests for electronic communication are properly logged and acted upon.

Related reading

View Decision Report 201507463 as a PDF (13.79 KB) Updated: March 13, 2018

View original on SPSO (Scottish Publ… website

Other decisions involving Lothian NHS Board

Reference Date Summary Outcome
202404449 01 Jan 2026 C complained about the care that their adult child (A) received from the prison healthcare team and particularly a failure … Upheld
202304800 01 Mar 2025 C complained that the board failed to provide reasonable personal care and treatment to their sibling (A). A was admitted … Upheld
202304367 01 Dec 2024 C complained on behalf of their spouse (A) about the standard of care and treatment received in the months before … Partly Upheld
202005296 01 May 2022 C complained that there had been an unreasonable delay in their late parent (A) receiving a prescription of antibiotics following … Upheld
202002582 01 Jan 2021 C complained about the clinical care provided to their child (A) by the board, specifically, that a Chiari malformation (where … Not Upheld
View all decisions for this organisation