
regulatory bodies and a culture change are required"
Some writers refer to Gooderham as an " expert". And expert in what? Has he ever whistleblown? No, I suspect not.
He concludes.
"A start would be for those in official positions to recognise the risks of whistleblowing. Then they might begin to limit the damage wrought by the next scandals which are probably already happening"
The theory is that if you write in measured terms as the BMJ would accept, they must be saying something important. In reality, if you read the piece, it says nothing important. It does not provide us with new information or problem solving measures. It is a lip service piece written to join in the party of media articles on whistleblowing.
In reality, the majority of senior doctors are the main problem in the culture to prevent whistleblowing. This just is not recognised. This can be viewed by the total lack of support from leading medical journals for vital issues raised by whistleblowers. Peter Gooderham is no stranger to neglecting Ward 87. He has remained tight lipped about it for 9 years.
The medical profession is extremely good at isolating whistleblowing doctors. It is a kind of " Hey look, lets see if they survive. We can't publicly be seen to associate with them because it might have a detrimental effect on my career". Character assassination quests then continue through the dark corridors of medicine. Perhaps it gives them that certain satisfaction to make life difficult for the whistleblower.
Gooderham makes no advances about improving the legal support for whistleblowers, or trade union representation or indeed defence union representation. He makes no suggestions that there should be a Health Select Committee review into Whistleblowing to come to a set of solutions after interviewing a number of whistleblowers. He does not suggest that PIDA should be reassessed and reviewed so that protection is guaranteed for doctors within their job not after they have been dismissed and whistleblown. He offers no suggestion of trauma support for whistleblowers or a Whistleblower Support group or medical school education on the subject. That is because Gooderham does live in his ivory tower. It is a legal ivory tower. Those that live in it are divorced from reality and practicality.
I should say Gooderham has known about Ward 87 since the early 2000. I note he fails to mention it in any article.
Ward 87 is a thorn in the BMJ's side. It can't be easy to be indirectly responsible for the deaths of more than 2000 people. But the finger should be pointing at the BMJ? They should ask themselves what they were doing while people were dying?
North Staffordshire and Staffordshire and what could have been done to prevent deaths? That is a question isn't it? What could the medical journals have done to prevent this catastrophy?
The link is of course forgotten yet the link between Haywood and Staffordshire is the commonest one. Haywood though isn't outspoken, she is a meek nurse who does the victim role quite well. Being a media constructed whistleblower is of course a little different from a real one :). The confort zone of media support, legal support and payments from Panorama are not something in the armory of every whistleblower. Real whistleblowers happen to be quite the opposite - they also happen to stand on their own two feet without various crutches given to a media styled whistleblower.
Tea and sympathy and debate is not what the whistleblowing world requires. It requires the Medical Journals to look at themselves to see what they could have done to support each and every whistleblower in the United Kingdom. It requires inquiries and practical solutions.
The BMJ remains unsupportive of Ward 87 to this day. They minds are clouded by the image of a " trouble maker" who has now probably become a trouble maker because she finds it unacceptable that 2000 people died because her concerns were neglected by them .
They were neglected by the BMJ because she did not fit the image that the BMJ has of whistleblowers. Image is everything of course. Facts and evidence mean nothing for the land of the BMJ. Essentially, you have to be a good little whisteblower and you can only be those if you are Margaret Haywood. The rest of the whistleblowers are hard hitting, outspoken tough guys who play to win.
Gooderham has his position to maintain much like his favourite medical colleagues. Between 2000 and 2006 despite knowing about Ward 87 Gooderham has never so much as dropped me a line of support.
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