Updated 15:19 October 25th 2016

Prof Harold Thimbleby …
Expert witnessing

I do expert witnessing for cases involving medical devices, such as infusion pumps or blood glucometers, and hospital IT systems.

Here is an article that gives you some background on what can go right and what can go wrong with healthcare IT — here is its abstract:

A criminal case balancing on the corruption of patient data in a UK hospital resulted in some nurses being acquitted and some given community service and custodial sentences. This paper explains the background, demonstrates the inability of hospital IT systems to provide reliable evidence, and highlights broader problems with IT culture affecting manufacturers, hospitals, police, legal advisors — and ultimately misleading clinicians and compromising delivery of care.
The NHS (and healthcare more generally) urgently needs to improve its IT awareness, management and policies. The police and the legal system need a more mature approach to IT. Manufacturers need to provide dependable systems that are fit for purpose for complex hospital environments. Regulators should ensure that systems meet better standards of quality and dependability.
This paper includes recommendations; the most fundamental being that hospitals acknowledge that IT is unreliable and they should procure and manage equipment with this in mind. In particular, mature and effective data protection and cybersecurity policies must be in place and used proactively. When problems occur, evidence derived from IT (whether systems or devices) must not be used in legal or disciplinary investigations without extreme care and independent proof of provenance.

Drop me an email at harold@thimbleby.net

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Drug dose calculator I made
Drug dose calculator I made

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