MPs have confirmed the appointment of Dr Henrietta Hughes as the
first Patient Safety Commissioner following her appearance before
the Health and Social Care Committee.
The post of Patient Safety Commissioner was created in 2021 in
response to a recommendation of the Independent Medicines and
Medical Devices Safety Review which considered avoidable harm in
the health sector. The PSC is expected to act as an independent
advocate for patients and to champion safety.
Dr Henrietta Hughes is a practising GP with a background in
women’s health. She was the National Guardian for the NHS until
2021.
Chair's comments
Health and Social Care Committee Chair MP said:
“With her background as National Guardian, Dr Henrietta Hughes is
without doubt the right person to take on this important new role
in patient safety and we wish her well in her appointment.
However, the lack of definition of the role is a cause for
concern. Dr Hughes is keen to act as the point of contact for
broader patient safety concerns, beyond medication and medical
device errors. It’s an approach that we on the Committee would
welcome but for that to succeed the post needs adequate
resources. Without back up and in the absence of clear metrics to
define what success will look like there is a serious risk that
the new Patient Safety Commissioner will fail.
We owe it to patients to ensure that the PSC is launched with the
best wind possible and we urge the Department of Health and
Social Care to address how best to support the role as a matter
of urgency.”