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Indian doc wins job battle in UK - Aug 2 2007
By
The Tribune
An NRI heart surgeon has won a
five-year legal battle to get his job back, after being suspended by the
National Health Service at a cost of £5 million.
Dr Raj Mattu (47), chief
cardiologist at the former Walsgrave Hospital in Coventry, was suspended
from his job in February, 2002, after he blew the whistle on
overcrowding at his heart attack recovery ward.
Managers forced extra beds into
the unit to meet treatment targets. Mattu claimed that this led to 11
patients dying because they could not be reached in an emergency by
resuscitation teams. He is also being accused of bullying and harassing
a junior doctor, which Mattu denied.
Since 2002, he has been sitting at
home on two-thirds of his £100,000 per annum salary while the NHS trust
paid locums (casuals) to do his work, fought the case to the High Court
and set up an independent inquiry.
The inquiry panel ruled two years
ago that Mattu should be allowed to return to work but the hospital
refused to accept the decision.
The hospital finally agreed
yesterday to let Mattu get back to work after a new management team at
the University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust, took over.
— PTI
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