The curious case of the bandwagon fan

There are few things that rustle up the jimmies of the devout sports fan than this curious species of fan that only sticks around when it is popular for them to do so. Such fair-weathered fans often earn ire or alienation. They’re the bane of the fandom of any team in a professional sport league. They are the “bandwagon fans.”

The “bandwagon fans” making the rounds in social media today earned their rather peculiar reputation through one trait: caprice. Their approach to the fandom of a team is purportedly grounded not on any loyalty but whatever catches their whimsy about the team at the moment. They are often likened to bettors in a wager who hedge by rooting for multiple teams.

an-afc-jersey-for-the-bandwagon-fan-29687-1251262103-26                                               Image source: Buzzfeed.com

Some noteworthy behaviors include changing jerseys with the seasons or being only truly invested during championships. A few may not even know half the roster save for the star player. In extreme cases, some would claim to be fans merely because of name recognition. They are also allegedly fickle; when the team loses or the superstar moves on (or both), so do a good portion of them.

wy55ptto20qtggofjpiu                                                  Image source: Complex.com

Naturally, this ruffles the feathers of more ardent fans who stick by the team in spite of the losses or changes in roster. Many true loyalists are dismissive of bandwagoners (or newbies in general) as a result. Others tend to be more open-minded about these newcomers, who would otherwise only have heard of their pet team, and often have hopes that these bandwagon fans would become much more than that.

Paul Benn is an attorney and sports fan from the Philadelphia area. Visit this Facebook page for more updates on sport culture.

The Philly Eagles as a Pop Cultural Institution

The Philadelphia Eagles and their fans have been a fixture of the urban culture of their home city since the team’s founding in 1933 and have found their way into the popular consciousness of America. Whether it’s the furor and candor of their fan base that impresses most sport publications or the team’s legendary rivalry with the New York Giants, the Philly Eagles have never failed to make an impression.

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Image source: Forbes.com

Sports is serious business in Philadelphia, and the team itself became a rallying symbol in the biographical and historical film Invincible, depicting a fictionalized version of its first game against the Giants in 1976. The colorful history of the Eagles goes beyond the heated rivalries and the requisite shenanigans that came with them. During the talent shortage that took place during the Second World War, the understaffed Eagles merged with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1943, forming the Phil-Pitt Combine, more commonly known as the Steagles.

Sports in the City of Brotherly love enjoys massive support from the fan community, of which the Eagles are a shining example. The fanbase of the Eagles has been one of the most devoted and eye-catching in the NFL, capable of making extreme turnarounds in ticket sales with little to no assistance. Their unrelenting support for their home team has managed to become a cultural quirk, whose somewhat exaggerated depiction is shown by Robert De Niro’s role in the film Silver Linings Playbook.

Paul Benn is a Philadelphia-based attorney and sports fan. Follow this Twitter account for more updates on the Eagles and other sports teams from Philly.

REPOST: NCAA Tournament will be showcasing some future Sixers

While the top 2015 NBA draft prospects prepare for the NCAA tournament, some teams are making preparations of their own. This article compiled a list of players who could be included in the 2015 NBA draft and who could draw interest from the Sixers.

Duke Blue Devils center Jahlil Okafor (15) warms up prior to a game against the North Carolina State Wolfpack at PNC Arena. (Rob Kinnan/USA Today)

Duke Blue Devils center Jahlil Okafor (15) warms up prior to a game against the North Carolina State Wolfpack at PNC Arena. | Image Source: philly.com

THE SIXERS are a few Miami Heat losses, a few not-so-friendly Los Angeles Laker ping pong balls and an Oklahoma City Thunder winning streak away grabbing four of the first 19 picks in the 2015 NBA draft.

Of course, with some twists of fate, they could just end up with their own pick, which could drop as low as sixth as the NBA standings currently dictate. (Three top spots can be displaced.)

Either way, the Sixers are going to be looking at the NCAA Tournament not just to see how they do in their collective pools but also to see how some of the talent they’ve had their eyes on the past few months perform.

Here are some players who could be drafted as high as 19th and who could very well draw interest from the Sixers.

Point guards: Notre Dame’s Jerian (Jerami’s older brother) Grant, Delon (Dorell’s younger brother) Wright, Providence’s Kris Dunn and Louisville’s Terry Rozier.

Combo guard: Ohio State’s D’Angelo Russell.

Shooting guards: Kentucky’s Devin Booker and Georgia State’s R.J. Hunter.

Swingman (guard/forward): Arizona’s Stanley Johnson.

Big men: Duke’s Jahlil Okafor, Kentucky’s Karl-Anthony Towns and Willie Cauley-Stein, Wisconsin’s Frank Kaminsky and Utah’s Jakob Poeltl.

Big forwards: Arkansas’ Bobby Portis, San Diego State’s Malik Pope, Louisville’s Montrezl Harrell, UCLA’s Kevon Looney, Texas’ Myles Turner and Kentucky’s Trey Lyles.

Small forwards: Duke’s Justise Winslow, Kansas’ Kelly Oubre, Arizona’s Rondae Hollis-Jefferson and Wisconsin’s Sam Dekker.

Who the Sixers will be able to pick will be determined by the lottery, which takes place May 19. But when you’re 15-52 and have the third-worst record, you are probably going to take the best player available.

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REPOST: Sixers’ Brown eager to get Noel and Embiid on court together

Philadelphia 76ers’ coach Brett Brown wants to continue working with Nerlens Noel and Joel Embiid. This article has the details.

Philadelphia 76ers´ Joel Embiid, right, of Cameroon and Nerlens Noel, left, share a laugh while looking at a laptop during warm-ups prior to the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2014, in Philadelphia. (Chris Szagola/AP)

Philadelphia 76ers’ Joel Embiid, right, of Cameroon and Nerlens Noel, left, share a laugh while looking at a laptop during warm-ups prior to the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2014, in Philadelphia. | Image Source: philly.com

BRETT BROWN spent much of his first season as the 76ers’ head coach tutoring his prized, but injured, rookie.

His sessions with Nerlens Noel took place for all to see, on the court hours before a game, the two working on the big man’s shooting form. They worked before and after practices, in which Noel did not participate while recovering from knee surgery. All the while, the coach was envisioning Noel becoming a better shooter, more fluid at the foul line.

Now, Brown looks at Noel in a completely different way. Yes, he still oversees the effort to correct the form of his shooting. But when he looks at the 6-11, 215-pounder now, one thought clearly enters the mind of the coach each and every time. That thought is Joel Embiid.

Like Noel, Embiid is out with an injury during his rookie campaign, most likely sitting out the full season while recovering from a fractured right foot. In the meantime, Brown is consumed with thoughts of Embiid and Noel playing together.

“All the time. All the time. All the time,” Brown said when asked if coaches Noel with Embiid in mind. “For sure we do. It would be kind of naive to not try to pair them up and figure out how they coexist and what it means to their respective games. Nerlens is the one that is going to have to adjust. I’m not going to make Joel a power forward. Nerlens has the chance to do that. They most definitely can coexist. That’s the most asked question, ‘How can they play together?’ Quite possibly, maybe the answer is, ‘Just fine.’ ”

Some of that comes out of sheer hope, but a lot of it has to do with what Noel has shown Brown and his staff this season. The play, no doubt, has been inconsistent. But when you look at these Sixers individually, you have to look at the future, not the now. And what Noel has shown certainly intrigues the coach.

“Lets just start with defense, because at the end of the day that’s who he is,” said Brown. “I have learned this year that he’s more gifted, in his first year, with off-the-ball defense than on the ball defense. As we grow him and he grows himself, it’s going to have to be both. Off the ball, where he can roam free and just seek blocked shots freely, he’s elite. Sometimes, because I’m watching Luc Mbah a Moute guard Al Jefferson, it just frees up Nerlens. He can just go make plays, at times leave his man.

“When he’s playing a stretch-four, it’s a little more difficult because he’s coming from the outside all the way to the rim. But if he’s covering a more traditional power forward, someone near the rim or not too far out, he covers ground. Off the ball, in his first year, he’s elite. The NBA stats will confirm that rim protection. But that’s off the ball. On the ball, he’s 215 pounds and he’s guarding centers or even ‘four’ men that have 20 or 30 pounds more on him. We have to teach him technique of the NBA where he’s using arm bars [forearm on opponent]. We have to teach him to better front to get him out of those weight problems [getting backed down].”

Noel has been a big reason the team is No. 12 in overall defense. The coach and staff have instilled in him that his job is year-round.

“I just want to continue to progress in certain ways and sustain energy and just play the way that I know I can play,” Noel said. “I think that I’ve been doing better with being more consistent.”

At 20, he is still just a kid. His game suffers when he gets too amped, such as last week while playing in Boston, near his hometown of Malden, Mass. There are times of hesitance, a bit of laziness and awkward offensive play. But the imagination, especially that of the coach, can run wild due to his athleticism, and the fact that he is going to be paired with the 7-foot, 260-pounder.

“Defensively in a halfcourt game, that’s what I see, where he’s better and where he needs work,” said Brown. “There’s another layer that’s challenging for him when he starts playing the ‘four’ spot that I saw when I played him with Henry [Sims] or [at some point with Embiid]. He’s so used to running at the rim when he gets back on defense to find the other team’s center. But when he’s covering a stretch-four, he doesn’t realize that he’s out on the wing, so it’s foreign to him in transition defense and it’s a different world because he never did that in AAU or at Kentucky. Defensively, good and bad, we have to grow him.

“Offensively, everybody talks, and fair enough, if he can shoot from 18 feet. I don’t see that as much of a mandatory need as others do. I think of him running, his playing fearless on going to get offensive rebounds and being the king of junk. Anything that’s energy, wild, reckless, kamikaze energy, offensively is going to suit him more than him being an outside shooter. Which may or may never come. We’re going to continue to work on it.”

Brown and Noel will continue to work, with Embiid always on the coach’s mind.

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Learning the game: Basic basketball positions

Image Source: en.wikipedia.org

In case it’s just not your thing, basketball is a popular sport where each team is composed of five players and the team to shoot the ball into the basket the most number of times during the game wins. The five players in each team and the bench players on reserve all play specific roles in order to lead their team to victory. The following will help you understand the different basketball positions and the functions they play on their team:

Point guard

The point guard is the person who calls the shots in the game. He should be a good at handling the ball, including deciding when to pass it and to whom. Stephen Curry, arguably the best point guard in the NBA today, exhibits these strengths and more. He is one of the highest scoring point guards in the league and he proved that he could also handle the ball well. Point guards are usually the smallest and fastest on the team but towering players like Magic Johnson changed the way point guards are used in a game.

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

Shooting guard

Usually the highest pointers in basketball, shooting guards are known to be excellent shooters especially from the three-point line. One of the greatest and most famous shooting guards in the history of basketball is Michael Jordan. While Jordan has set the bar high for subsequent generations’ shooting guards, players like Manu Ginobili and Kobe Bryant have shown distinction in owning this position.

Small forward

The small forward is supposed to be one of the most versatile players on the team alongside the shooting guards. They’re quick but also strong and aggressive. A good example of an effective and powerful small forward is LeBron James. Obviously, he has the agility and the skill to score, rebound and defend for his team.

Image Source: pistonpowered.com

Power forward

Power forwards are big and strong. They catch rebounds, block open shots and clear the path towards the basket. They may not score the most points in the game but they make up for it by shot blocking and rebounding. Considered one of the top power forwards in NBA today, Anthony Davis is just beginning his career and many have already witnessed his potential to become one of the best players. He has the build and the skill to become a versatile power forward.

Center

Centers are the tallest and biggest members of the team. They are considered the last defense to the basket and so patrol the painted area, blocking shots and rebounding when necessary. To this day Will Chamberlain is famous for his undefeated one hundred-point game and he is considered as one of the best centers in NBA history.

Image Source: spokeo.com

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REPOST: Eagles expect the old RG3

Eagle’s coach Chip Kelly expects to see the old Robert Griffin III (RG3) on their game against the Redskins. Read about what Coach Kelly really thinks about RG3 in this News Observer article below.

— If RG3’s days in Washington are nearing an end, he won’t have to look far to find a coach that appreciates his talent.

Chip Kelly will watch from the opposite sideline Saturday.

Robert Griffin III is back as the starting quarterback for the Redskins (3-11) when they host the Philadelphia Eagles (9-5).

Listening to Kelly rave about Griffin suggests he would rather his team faced Kirk Cousins or Colt McCoy, whose injury allowed Griffin to return under center.

“I know he can run and I know he can throw,” Kelly said. “That’s what we’re preparing for. We’re preparing for the best. He can run the zone-read play and you better be conscious of the guy coming off the disconnect.

“It’s different than Tony Romo. When Tony Romo turns and hands the ball off to DeMarco Murray, you’re not worried about Tony running out the backside. When RG3 turns and hands the ball off, you better be worried about him running out the backside.”

Griffin ran for 815 yards, threw for 3,200 yards and 20 touchdowns to only five interceptions in a sensational rookie season in 2012 when he led the Redskins to an NFC East title. But he tore the ACL in his right knee in a playoff loss that year and dislocated his left ankle earlier this season.

He hasn’t been the same player since his injuries and was benched by coach Jay Gruden a few weeks ago. The Redskins are 4-14 in games Griffin has started since opening 2013 with a home loss to Philadelphia in Kelly’s NFL debut.

Still, the Eagles are wary of Griffin.

“If you’re not aware of where RG3 is, he can hurt you with his legs and his arm,” Kelly said. “We got to be really sharp in our contain when we rush the quarterback because he’s a different element than we’ve seen except for Russell Wilson and you saw what happened to us. I thought we did a really good job at times in defending Seattle, and then all of a sudden Russell just extended plays and continued to make things happen.”

Griffin is 2-2 against the Eagles with a 101.4 passer rating, 10 TD passes and two interceptions in those four games.

“Last week, he looked a lot more confident and looser than earlier in the year,” Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins said. “It looks like the time off has done his legs a lot of good. He’s moving pretty well, has a lot more confidence in his throws. You can tell he’s been a lot more decisive.”

The Eagles are desperate to keep their playoff hopes alive after consecutive homes losses to Seattle and Dallas. They can finish 11-5 and miss the playoffs unless the Cowboys lose one game or the Packers or Lions or Seahawks lose two.

Meanwhile, the Redskins are playing the spoiler role in another miserable season. They’re heading toward their ninth last-place finish since owner Dan Snyder bought the team in 1999.

It doesn’t mean the Eagles will take the Redskins lightly.

“The pressure’s kind of off,” Jenkins said. “(Griffin) doesn’t have a lot to lose. He actually looks better. We expect to get his best. This is an opportunity at the end of the year for him to put some good tape out there and finish on a good note.”

And perhaps impress a potential new team. Considering Nick Foles and Mark Sanchez were inconsistent this year, Kelly could have interest in bringing Griffin to Philadelphia.

That’s a topic for the offseason.

“That kid is athletic as heck and he can run really, really well,” Kelly said.

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Bill Davis’ defensive plans has critics silent

Image Source: philly.com

When coach Chip Kelly of the Philadelphia Eagles hired Bill Davis to be the team’s defensive coordinator, some people had their hesitations. Davis’ previous stints included some time with the Cleveland Browns, and most people remember the plays to be focused more on patience rather than assertive actions. After the news broke, many people questioned the opportunity, even arguing that Kelly and Davis were very technical in thinking though not in actual delegation.

Sports fans were not impressed with the hire but Davis did not let this negativity affect him, stating that he would create schemes around the actual players rather than ideas (which he was known to do). This change in planning has drastically improved the Eagles’ performance, and many of Davis’ critics are finding fewer things to complain about.

Image Source: azcentral.com

In fact, the Eagles’ game against the Cardinals last October may be seen as Davis’ best defense as a coordinator. And even before that spectacular game, Davis has successfully coordinated unbelievable performances thus far. In September, Davis proudly, and without any arrogance, gave an interview saying he was happy with the rush pass after two straight games without a sack. He even went on to say that the players were doing their jobs and that their plays were backed by technical standards.

It would seem that Davis has found the balance between his love for technicalities and knowing and understanding the strengths and weaknesses of his players. Game after game, his strategies have been vindicated, particularly with the superior 27-0 game against the New York Giants last October.

Many sports fanatics are holding their breaths as to what lies in the future. Some people are still pegging this trend as a fluke, but more and more enthusiasts think that Davis is and will continue to hold his own as a defensive coordinator.

Image Source: phillymag.com

Paul Benn is a sports enthusiast and a big fan of the Philadelphia Eagles. Learn more about him by following this Facebook page.

REPOST: 5 Bold Predictions for Philadelphia Eagles’ Week 6 Matchup

Bleacher Report’s Bryan Swartz shares five bold predictions for Philadelphia Eagle’s next matchup.

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

The Philadelphia Eagles have the highest-scoring offense in the NFL. They have a defense that has a knack for making game-saving plays in the final minutes. They have perhaps the most explosive special teams unit in the history of the NFL. And if the season ended now, they would be the No. 1 seed in the NFC.

Yet despite the Eagles’ 4-1 record and knack for pulling out close wins, there’s a general sense of pessimism in Philly right now. I would know. I’m in that group.

It’s the way Nick Foles has played in four of the five games this year. It’s the league’s rushing champion in 2013 averaging fewer than three yards per carry. It’s a depleted offensive line and a defense that ranks 27th in points allowed. It’s a team that could just as easily be 0-5 as 4-1.

Right now, though, it’s about victories. You want your team to play their best at the end of the season. At the beginning, you just want close wins, any way you can. That’s a trend the Eagles will hope to continue against the New York Giants this week on Sunday Night Football. On the following slides, I give five predictions for the much-anticipated battle between two playoff contenders.

1. Nick Foles Completes 73 Percent of Passes

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

Remember the Nick Foles who threw 27 touchdowns against just two interceptions in 2013? Yeah, that was a long time ago.

The Nick Foles of 2014 looks more like the Nick Foles of 2012, a rookie who threw six touchdowns and five interceptions despite injuries to LeSean McCoy, DeSean Jackson, Jason Peters, Jason Kelce and Todd Herremans.

In 2014, Foles has thrown for eight scores against five picks with a very average 82.5 passer rating. He’s played just one great game in five contests. He’s also due for a second great game.

Although the Giants have some talented cornerbacks, I think Foles looks like 2013 Foles on Sunday night. I’m predicting Foles to complete 24 of 33 passes for 234 yards and two touchdowns. More importantly, he won’t commit a turnover.

2. Darren Sproles Continues to Outproduce LeSean McCoy

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

The LeSean McCoy problem may have reached its peak in the final minutes of the Eagles’ game against the St. Louis Rams when the All-Pro tailback found himself on the sideline, benched. It was 31-year-old veteran Darren Sproles who helped run down the clock, and it was Sproles who broke a 25-yard run, the team’s longest offensive play of the game.

I don’t see a light at the end of the tunnel when it comes to McCoy. Actually, I do, but it involves the return of Evan Mathis and Jason Kelce. Without a dominant offensive line, McCoy isn’t even close to the same back. Look at his 2012 season, when he averaged just 4.2 yards per carry and scored just two touchdowns without Jason Peters and Kelce on the offensive line.

Sproles, on the other hand, is finding holes when McCoy can’t. Expect Chip Kelly to finally realize which back is the more productive of the two right now. I see Sproles carrying 11 times for 58 yards and a score, while McCoy carries 16 times for 61 yards and no touchdowns.

3. Each Team Collects Four Sacks

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

The Eagles’ much-criticized pass rush from early in the season has really picked it up over the past two games. After collecting zero sacks in Weeks 2 and 3, the Eagles registered four sacks against San Francisco in Week 4 and four more against St. Louis in Week 5.

It’s not one player collecting all of the sacks for Philly, either. Connor Barwin has three over the past two weeks. Vinny Curry has two. Trent Cole has 1.5, Brandon Graham has one, and even Casey Matthews has half a sack.

The Eagles’ pass rush is hot right now, and I think that continues, even against an underrated Giants offensive line.

However, the Eagles’ offensive line has overachieved in pass protection over the last two weeks, surrendering just a single sack. They’re due to regress.

I’m expecting both quarterbacks to spend a lot of time on the ground on Sunday night.

4. Brandon Boykin Records Longest Interception Return of Career

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

By this point, it’s become apparent that Brandon Boykin just isn’t going to get an opportunity to play on the outside, even though he’s clearly the best cover corner on the team.

That doesn’t take away his ability to make plays, however. Boykin hasn’t intercepted a pass yet this season after recording six last year (in barely half of the snaps).

Boykin took to Twitter earlier today to ask fans the longest interception return of his career. The answer, by the way, was 76 yards against the Green Bay Packers.

I’m predicting Boykin to break that record with a 102-yard pick-six against Eli Manning in the third quarter. Let’s see if that’s enough to earn him more playing time.

5. Giants Win in Shootout to Take NFC East Lead

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

Image Source: bleacherreport.com

I will not be picking the Eagles to win on Sunday night. They’re a good team, maybe a very good team, but they’re only going to be able to survive so many close contests.

The Giants are a really good football team right now. Their offense is clicking, and they’ve scored at least 35 points in three straight games. Eli Manning looks like the quarterback who won two Super Bowls during a five-year span, and the defense ranks first in the league in interceptions.

The Eagles have some holes to fix right now. They also need some key players to return from injuries, notably Evan Mathis and Jason Kelce, plus inside linebacker Mychal Kendricks.

I think the Eagles will win the NFC East this season. But it won’t be easy, especially after losing to the Giants on Sunday Night Football.

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The case of 76ers being the ‘least watchable’ team

 

Image Source: chachaandspoons.com

 

Any fan would have to face it at this point; it’s difficult to stay with the team after it has dismantled its roster too quickly. While this may prove to pay off in the distant future, the present is a bitter pill to take.

USA Today has recently released its NBA Watchability Rankings for 2014-15 and the 76ers has been ranked 30th or the least watchable team for this season. It is too soon for its two new drafts, Joel Embiid and Dario Saric, to play in this season. Meanwhile, it has traded away Thaddeus Young, the team’s top scorer.

 

Image Source: usatoday.com

 

As it stands, the current roster has been noted to be capable of challenging the NBA futility record, which it set back in the 1972-73 season with a 9-73 record. For this year, the team is expected to finish one game worse than its previous record at 8-74. Definitely not a team anyone would like to watch if they want to avoid being disappointed.

Still, there might be some good times ahead. General manager Sam Hinkie seems determined to get the first pick in the 2015 draft and as many assets as the team can. Developing the young players in its lineup is a definite perk. Notable among its current lineup of players is Nerlens Noel, a shot-blocker who has rebuilt his shooting style and has shown some promise of being among the remaining members who can carry the team moving forward.

 

9-9-nerlens-noel-76ers-capsule

Image Source: usatoday.com

 

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REPOST: ‘I reported my concerns but was just given the brush off’ – NHS whistleblowers tell of being ignored and marginalised

The Telegraph shares some of the incriminating stories of NHS whistleblowers.

 Robert Francis : 'I reported my concerns but was just given the brush off' - NHS whistleblowers tell of being ignored and marginalised

Sir Robert Francis Photo: PA | Image Source: telegraph.co.uk

Sir Robert Francis, the chairman of the public inquiry into the Mid Staffs scandal, is launching the first independent review of whistleblowing in the NHS, and calls on those who have been mistreated to speak out.
The investigation is expected to begin on Wednesday, when he will ask those who have been affected to come forward.
Here are some of those whose experience has led to the review:

1. John Marchant

 

Image Source: telegraph.co.uk

John Marchant, the former head of security at Dudley Group of Hospitals trust, claimed staff had routinely forced vulnerable patients to stay in their rooms – and even confined them to their beds – despite them posing no danger to anyone.
He said his security guards had become so concerned about the practice that in one instance they had refused to restrain a child and warned bosses the action was illegal. Mr Marchant also alleged that pensioners had been subject to restraints when all they wanted was to walk around a ward, or chat with fellow patients.
Mr Marchant said: “Detention is being used simply because the patient become so frustrated at not even being able to go out for a walk in the hospital grounds because there are no staff to accompany them.
“Some would go back to their rooms if you asked them, but others would have to be closed in and it would be very distressing for them.”

He repeatedly raised his concerns over the practice with senior managers, but was made redundant from the Dudley Group in December 2012.

The trust denied Mr Marchant’s claims and insisted it always acted in the best interest of patients. However, it admitted that security staff had raised concerns about the issue.
Following the revelations in The Sunday Telegraph, in January, the Department of Health has ordered the Care Quality Commission, the health regulator, to carry out an investigation into his claims.

2. Annabelle Blackburn

Annabelle Blackburn claimed says she felt effectively “blacklisted” and forced to work in a neighbouring county after warning about potentially dangerous problems at the Oxfordshire GP surgery where she was employed.
She said she had found blood test results ignored and emails going unanswered. She also claimed to have found evidence that a woman had not been told about a probable diagnosis of leukaemia, and a man who should have been told he had prostate cancer.

Mrs Blackburn said the delays in acting on test results or information in emails may have caused severe harm to several patients. In two cases she feared that patients could have died prematurely because the information had not been acted on.

But when the experienced nurse spoke out, other GPs in Oxfordshire were told she was “exaggerating her concerns” and should not be regarded as a genuine whistleblower.

When Mrs Blackburn took her case to a tribunal in 2012, a judge said that members of the local primary care trust, since disbanded, had thought that she was “making trouble”. Although Mrs Blackburn lost the case, the employment tribunal agreed that the trust had failed to deal with the complaints she had raised.

Mrs Blackburn said: “The way Oxfordshire PCT handled the situation was terrible. They failed to treat the crisis at the clinic with any urgency and then they tried to ignore and discredit me.”

3. The doctor “brushed under the carpet”

A doctor who worked at two hospitals at the centre of a scandal over patients dying after keyhole cancer surgery claimed managers ignored him when he tried to raise the alarm over poor standards and dangerous practices by surgeons.

The doctor, who wished to remain anonymous for fear of losing his job, said he and other members of staff were ignored when they tried to warn about the behaviour of surgeons at Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells hospitals. He said his colleagues’s fears were “brushed under the carpet” and that managers preferred to ignore their warnings rather than confront the way three surgeons responsible for the keyhole procedure, Professor Amir Nisar, Haythem Ali and Ahmed Hamouda, were working.

The doctor said: “I reported my concerns but I was just given the brush off. Several other junior doctors, and nursing staff, expressed their concerns, but they all had the same experience as me.”

He spoke out after a damning report found that managers at Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells ignored repeated staff warnings dating back several years about the behaviour of the surgeons.

This newspaper revealed in May how the hospitals were forced to stop carrying out keyhole surgery for upper gastrointestinal cancer (GI), on the instruction of The Royal College of Surgeons (RCS), following the unexpected death of five patients who had undergone the procedure in December 2012 and early 2013.
Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust barred Prof Nisar, Mr Ali and Mr Hamouda from carrying out the procedure on the recommendation of the RCS, but they were allowed to continue general surgery at the hospitals.

4. Rebecca Prideaux

Rebecca Prideaux, a former inspector at Britain’s health and care watchdog, claimed that elderly people were being left to suffer in appalling conditions because regulators refused to act on warnings.

She said poor care routinely went unchecked because staff at the Care Quality Commission (CQC) were given inadequate training. Workers were discouraged from taking action when they uncovered risks to the most vulnerable, she added.

Mrs Prideaux resigned from CQC in May last year, saying she had repeatedly urged senior managers to improve the training given to hundreds of inspectors who visit care homes and hospitals.

The former policewoman said she was put in charge of an inspection of a 120-bed care home the day after her induction finished, after witnessing just two such inspections previously and receiving no advice on how to draw up a report.

She accused regulators of failing to take proper action even after she warned of appalling failings in care and claimed reports often omitted some of the most damning failings.
Mrs Prideaux said: “When I joined CQC I was over the moon. I had cared for my grandparents and I really believed in a job where you could make a difference. In the end I was left feeling that if I cared, that was the last place you should be working.”
The CQC said Mrs Prideaux’s views were not shared by the more experienced and specialist inspectors who worked with her. But it said it had changed the way it carried out inspections, in particular to ensure that all inspectors are specialists in the areas they inspect.

5. Raj Mattu

Dr Raj Mattu, a hospital consultant who was “hounded mercilessly” out of his job after raising concerns about patient safety, won a landmark legal victory for unfair dismissal in April, following the longest-running and most expensive whistle-blowing case in NHS history.

The cardiologist, was suspended for eight years, then sacked in 2010, after warning that patients were dying because of cost-cutting practices introduced by the then Walsgrave Hospital hospital, in Coventry.
NHS bosses hired private investigators in an apparent attempt to discredit him, spending an estimated £6 million in pursuit of the case against him.

MPs said the employment tribunal ruling, which found the whistleblower had been unfairly dismissed, shone a light on a “sinister and dystopian” culture of cover-up within the NHS, which destroyed the lives of those who tried to speak up for patients.
Dr Mattu said: “My treatment by the trust over the past 13 years has damaged my health, my professional reputation and my livelihood and its effects on my personal and private life have been devastating.”
University Hospital of Coventry and Warwickshire NHS trust said it was disappointed by the employment tribunal’s decision.
6. Roger Davidson

Roger Davidson lost his job as head of media and public affairs for the Care Quality Commission just before the 2010 general election, after telling how a quarter of NHS trusts had failed to meet basic hygiene standards.
He also warned that the CQC had stopped telling the public how to find reports on infections in their local hospitals in order to limit publicity damaging to the NHS.

Mr Davidson was forced to sign a gagging order when he left but his testimony emerged during the Francis inquiry into appaling failings at Mid-Staffs which led to hundreds of “excess deaths”.

It formed part of a tranche of documents which detailed how the regulator was apparently intent on suppressing negative publicity about the NHS, amid political pressure from then Labour ministers and their advisers before the election.

Mr Davidson, who went on to become head of media at NHS England, said: “The message that ‘we don’t want bad news’ infected the whole organisation. There was no compass.”

7. Professor Narinder Kapur

Professor Narinder Kapur was dismissed as a consultant neuropsychologist and head of neuropsychology at Addenbrooke’s hospital in Cambridge after voicing his concerns about patient safety and poor standards of care.
Cambridge University Hospitals trust (CUH) dismissed Prof Kapur in 2010, claiming there had been a breakdown in their relationship because of his management style and working methods.

But in July 2012 an employment tribunal ruled that he had been unfairly dismissed. It added: “The tribunal condemns unreservedly the way in which the NHS has conducted itself in respect of this allegation.”

However, because the tribunal found Prof Kapur had not been sacked because of his whistle-blowing, but because there had been “an irredeemable breakdown in trust, confidence and communication” between him and other managers, it did not order his reinstatement.

Prof Kapur, 64, who is now a consultant neuropsychologist at Imperial College Healthcare Trust and visiting professor of neuropsychology at University College London, said: “I raised my concerns about staff shortages and the impact on patient care several times to my line managers, I had a duty to do so on behalf of my patients, but I was repeatedly ignored by the hospital senior management. If that can happen to a professor like myself, with a worldwide reputation in his field, imagine what happens when more junior members of staff try to raise the alarm.”

8. Sharmila Chowdhury

Sharmila Chowdhury had enjoyed an unblemished 27-year career with the NHS until she was sacked after blowing the whistle on senior doctors who were moonlighting at a private hospital while being paid to treat NHS patients.
The radiology service manager at Ealing Hospital trust repeatedly warned the hospital’s senior managers that doctors were dishonestly claiming thousands of pounds every month and that the trust had lost £250,000 of public money through such arrangements.

Ealing hospital failed for two years to take any action against the two doctors later accused of fraud at a tribunal hearing. Instead, Ms Chowdhury was suspended after a counter-allegation of fraud made against her by a junior whom she had reported for breaching patient safety. The allegation was never proven and in July 2010 the employment tribunal judge took the unusual step of ordering the trust to reinstate Ms Chowdhury’s full salary. However the trust made her post redundant and the case was eventually settled out of court.
Ms Chowdhury, a widow with a teenage son, received two years pay, although £77,000 of that was paid out in legal fees. She found her whistle-blowing made it hard for her to find further employment in the health sector. She is also fighting cancer.

Ms Chowdhury, 54, who met Jeremy Hunt, the health secretary, in June, to discuss the plight of whistle-blowers, said: “The public has a right to know what is happening with public money. Despite winning a hearing in which I was proven to be a whistleblower, I’ve no job and no money.”

9. Helene Donnelly

Helene Donnelly raised more than 100 complaints about the way patients were being treated at Stafford Hospital while she was working there as a nurse in Accident and Emergency.
She became was a key witness during the Mid-Staffs public inquiry into reports of poor care, abuse and neglect of care at the hospital, where there were between 400 and 1,200 more deaths than would normally have been expected between 2005 and 2008.
In her evidence, Ms Donnelly said nurses in A&E were expected to break rules as a matter of course in order to meet targets, including falsifying records to pretend that patients had not been kept waiting for more than four hours.

When she raised her concerns she was met with threats and bullying by some of her more senior colleagues. At one stage she had to ask members of her family to come and pick her up when she finished a shift a night because she was afraid to walk back to the car on her own.

Ms Donnelly was appointed an OBE in May for her services to the NHS, in recognition of her work to support hospital staff to raise concerns and improve care for patients.

She is now an ambassador for cultural change at the Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent Partnership NHS Trust and works to relay staff concerns to the chief executive and is helping the Department of Health draw up whistle-blowing training for NHS staff.

Ms Donnelly said: “I am frequently being contacted by individuals from all over the UK who have tried to speak out at their own trusts, but find they are ignored. Far too many who hold positions of power – and who could affect change – are still dragging their feet while patients and staff continue to suffer.”

10. Kim Holt

Kim Holt, a consultant paediatrician, was suspended after she told managers about serious failings at the clinic where Baby P was later treated just days before his death at the hands of his mother and her boyfriend.
Ms Holt and three colleagues wrote to managers in 2006, warning that understaffing and poor record keeping posed a serious risk to patients’ safety at St Anne’s clinic in Haringey, north London, and that a child would die if action was not taken. But bosses ignored her warnings and removed her from the clinic.

Baby Peter Connelly was seen by an inexperienced locum doctor, Sabah Al-Zayyat, at St Anne’s in the summer of 2007, three days before he was killed and some time after Ms Holt and her fellow whistle-blowers had left. Zayyat failed to spot signs that the 17-month-old boy, who was on Haringey’s child protection register, had been physically abused.

Ms Holt later said: “I believe that if our concerns had been taken seriously at the time we raised them, then we could have prevented the death of Baby Peter. Several of the failings found by the inquiries into his death were 100 per cent the same as the failings we complained about the year before he died.”

She also said the hospital had offered her £120,000 to withdraw her complaints in the wake of Peter’s death – a claim the hospital denied.

In 2011 Great Ormond Street hospital and Haringey primary care trust, which co-managed the clinic, formally apologised to Ms Holt, who is currently advising the CQC on how the regulator can help support staff who raise concerns about standards of care.

11. David Drew

Dr David Drew, a consultant paediatrician at Walsall Manor Hospital claimed he was sacked after raising the alarm in the case of a toddler who died after being discharged from the hospital.

Kyle Keen had been admitted to Walsall Manor on June 21, 2006, where bruises were noted but no follow-up action was taken and he was discharged. The toddler was then admitted to the the paediatric intensive care unit at North Staffordshire Hospital, in Stoke-on-Trent, on June 29 with a brain injury and died a day later.

Kyle had been shaken by his stepfather Tyrone Matthews, then aged 25, who was sentenced to six-and-a-half years in prison for manslaughter.

Dr Drew said he had tried to raise concerns over his death and warned that his case should have been referred to social services.

The hospital was criticised in a serious case review in 2009 after it emerged nurses treating Kyle for a stomach upset had spotted suspicious bruises on his body a week before he was admitted with the brain injury.
Matters had came to a head after Dr Drew emailed a prayer around his department in April 2009, hoping it would help motivate his colleagues. The 65-year-old, who had an unblemished 37-year career in the NHS, was told to “keep his religious beliefs to himself” by a review panel called to investigate his conduct in March 2010.
He was sacked for gross misconduct and insubordination for failing to accept the panel’s instructions and for disclosing confidential information in relation to other matters.

Dr Drew said the email had been used as a smokescreen to push him out of his post. He said: ‘My case was never about the religion, it was about the fact the hospital wouldn’t listen to its most senior paediatrician telling them they were cutting costs to the bone and putting patient safety at risk. It’s all about whistle-blowing.”
In April 2012 an employment tribunal rejected his claims of unfair dismissal, religious discrimination and victimisation against Walsall Hospitals NHS Trust.

12. Kay Sheldon

Kay Sheldon, a non-executive director of the Care Quality Commission, feared patients’ lives were being put at risk because the NHS’s official regulator was not doing its job properly.
After she raised concerns at the Mid-Staffs public inquiry, the CQC’s then chairman called for her to be immediately suspended, then ordered an assessment of her which suggested she could be suffering from paranoid schizophrenia.

Ms Sheldon, who had been open about her history of depression, said: “They were trying to discredit me as either mad or bad, as mentally ill or a troublemaker – it’s shocking the lengths they were willing to go to in order to get me out.”

She refused to sign a gagging order and last June told The Sunday Telegraph: “I am worried that the regulator has been giving false assurances that hospitals are safe, when they are not, and that could mean patients are at risk, it could mean that they are harmed and it could mean that some die, when their deaths could have been prevented.”
The following month she was vindicated by an inquiry into the Morecambe Bay baby deaths scandal, which accused CQC of presiding over a “cover-up” of their failings.

While the former managers involved denied her accusations, the organisation’s new management is now radically overhauling its inspection methods.
Ms Sheldon said that the CQC had been under pressure to avoid “finding another Mid Staffs” in the wake of the 2009 scandal.

 

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