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Chris Elliot’s widow, Victoria, said the £300,000 fine levied on Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS foundation trust was derisory. Photograph: Family handout View image in fullscreen Chris Elliot’s widow, Victoria, said the £300,000 fine levied on Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS foundation trust was derisory. Photograph: Family handout Cheltenham hospital admits failing man who died after using contaminated shower Chris Elliot was exposed to ‘lethal dose’ of bacteria while receiving chemotherapy from Gloucestershire NHS trust An NHS trust has admitted to failing to provide safe care to a man who died after using a contaminated shower in a hospital while undergoing chemotherapy. Chris Elliot, 59, a father of two, died a fortnight after he was admitted to Cheltenham general hospital in Gloucestershire to be treated for leukaemia. The bacteria pseudomonas aeruginosa had been found on a shower head in the room Elliot used more than a week before he was admitted but no action had been taken, a hearing before a district judge in Cheltenham heard. His widow, Victoria Elliot, accused Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS foundation trust of systemic failings during the hearing. She said it had been up to the family to uncover what had happened, and criticised the trust for delaying admitting liability. In a victim personal statement, Victoria Elliot said her husband’s death had left “a chasm” in the family’s lives and told the court: “He was treated with a mixture of arrogance, incompetence and a cavalier attitude to his safety.” She said his weakened immune system had made him a “sitting duck”, adding: “Chris had absolutely no chance of survival, showering every day in his isolation room in a lethal dose of bacteria. Chris’s death occurred in great part as a result of the abject failure of care by the very people tasked with looking after him.” Victoria Elliot continued: “My own grief has been wedged between Chris’s death and the hideous ordeal of getting to the bottom of how he died. The impact of Chris’s death on me and my family has been compounded by the battle I have had to fight for the truth. “I question how an organisation whose raison d’être is meant to be to care for the patient and his/her relatives should use every opportunity to delay admitting liability.” The trust admitted failing to provide safe care and treatment, a criminal offence under the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. It was fined £300,000. Outside court, Victoria Elliot called the sum derisory. James Marsland, for the Care Quality Commission, which brought the prosecution, said pseudomonas aeruginosa had been confirmed by a laboratory on a shower head in a side room at the Rendcomb ward, which specialises in treating oncology (cancer) and haematology patients, on 1 August 2022. Testing and sampling of water had been delegated to a company called Gloucestershire Managed Services (GMS), which is owned by the trust, Marsland said. But he told the court ther
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