NHS in Britain spend a million pound on Indian-origin surgeon-to keep him off work
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Britain's state-funded National Health Service (NHS) is reported to have splurged a sum of million pounds on an Indian-origin surgeon; only with a different cause. This huge sum is the total compensation for keeping him off-work: after he reportedly raised patient safety concerns at the facility.
The Royal Blackburn Hospital in northern England sent liver surgeon Ditya Agrawal, 43, home on full pay in 2011 after he spoke about his fears over working practices at the hospital.
The hospital has since paid legal bills of at least 250,000 pounds fighting Agrawal's complaint that he was unfairly treated and has spent more than 700,000 pounds paying his salary for four years and on locums to cover his absence, the Mirror reported.
A high court judge has ruled in Agrawal's favour when the General Medical Council sought to stop him practising pending a full disciplinary hearing.
The Royal Blackburn Hospital in northern England sent liver surgeon Ditya Agrawal, 43, home on full pay in 2011 after he spoke about his fears over working practices at the hospital.
The hospital has since paid legal bills of at least 250,000 pounds fighting Agrawal's complaint that he was unfairly treated and has spent more than 700,000 pounds paying his salary for four years and on locums to cover his absence, the Mirror reported.
A high court judge has ruled in Agrawal's favour when the General Medical Council sought to stop him practising pending a full disciplinary hearing.
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