Matthew Hopkins
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Born | Great Wenham |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Date of died | August 12,1647 |
Died | Manningtree |
United Kingdom | |
Buried | August 1647 |
Parents | James Hopkins |
Books | The Discovery of Witches |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 793702 |
About Matthew Hopkins
Matthew Hopkins was an English witch-hunter whose career flourished during the English Civil War. He claimed to hold the office of Witchfinder General, although that title was never bestowed by Parliament. His witch-hunts mainly took place in East Anglia.
Women's remarkable Civil War roles revealed in Huntingdon display
... At the same time, " women were accused of being at the root of what was going wrong in this period with a resurgence of witchcraft led by the infamous deeply misogynistic Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins - 90% of those accused were women" he said...
Forceps left in patient following Alexandra Hospital operation
... Matthew Hopkins, chief executive of Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, said: " We are aware of an incident which involved a surgical instrument being left inside a patient following surgery...
Mother left waiting in ambulance for an hour with her dead baby
... The chief executive of the Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, Matthew Hopkins, said: " We have carried out a preliminary review of the incident with colleagues from the West Midlands Ambulance Service and together we are working to make improvements to our procedures...
Forceps left in patient following Alexandra Hospital operation
Metal forceps were left inside a patient in a so-called never Event at a Worcestershire hospital.
The error occurred during a complex seven-hour abdominal operation at Alexandra Hospital on 23 November.
The patient spent The Night in intensive care at The Site in Redditch when the six-inch (15 cm) object could not be retrieved the same day.
The Hospital trust has apologised unreservedly and said it would share the findings of an investigation.
The instrument was an arterial clamp resembling a large pair of scissors.
Under normal circumstances, all instruments should be counted and checked twice before the patient is closed. There is also a process of " signing out" at The End of an operation to confirm they are all accounted for.
A source claimed such an incident - known as a never Event - should not be able to happen.
It was also claimed that nothing like this had happened at The Hospital for at least 15 years.
The Bbc understands that following the lengthy operation, The Device was found to be missing and was confirmed to be inside the patient, via x-ray, while they were still under anaesthetic.
When it was not possible to remove the forceps, the patient was transferred to intensive care overnight.
A further operation was carried out The Next day to remove the clamp and the patient returned to intensive care where they were described as stable.
Matthew Hopkins , chief executive of Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, said: " We Are aware of an incident which involved a surgical instrument being left inside a patient following surgery.
" There are clear and well established processes in place to protect patients from this kind of Event , which are exceptionally rare.
" We Are currently carrying out an investigation into What Happened . The patient and their family have been informed as part of our duty of candour.
" We have apologised unreservedly to the patient and promised to share the findings of our investigation with them once it is completed. "
Source of news: bbc.com