Source · SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman)

Fife NHS Board

SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman) Not Upheld Reference 201706113 Sector Health Category clinical treatment / diagnosis Decided 01 January 2019

View NHS Fife scorecard

Full decision

Summary

Mrs C complained about the medical care and treatment her late mother (Mrs A) received when she attended the Victoria Hospital. In particular that more could have been done by the cardiac service to investigate Mrs A's symptoms and diagnose her.

We took independent advice from a consultant cardiologist (a doctor who specialises in the heart and blood vessels). We found that there had been some shortcomings in relation to aspects of communication, however, this did not impact on Mrs A's condition. We found that overall the care and treatment Mrs A received had been reasonable. We also noted that the timing of the cardiac tests less than two weeks after a referral from a GP demonstrated good practice and a responsive organisation. We did not uphold Mrs C's complaint.

Related reading

View Decision Report 201706113 as a PDF (23.72 KB) Updated: January 23, 2019

View original on SPSO (Scottish Publ… website

Other decisions involving Fife NHS Board

Reference Date Summary Outcome
202410341 01 May 2026 C complained about the care and treatment provided by the board in relation to a cancerous lesion (squamous cell carcinoma, … Upheld
202308194 01 Dec 2025 C complained that the board’s mental health services did not communicate information regarding C's adult child (A) reasonably. A, who … Upheld
202402736 01 Dec 2025 C complained on behalf of their spouse (A). The first of C’s complaints was that the board had failed to … Partly Upheld
202404687 01 Sep 2025 C complained about the care and treatment provided by the board in relation to excision of a right sided neck … Upheld
202305480 01 Sep 2025 C complained about the nursing care provided to their late parent (A) whilst in hospital. They complained about a lack … Upheld
View all decisions for this organisation