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Billie McLaughlin, 59, had hoped to see her stepfather, Terry Brady, 74, after he passed away at Inverclyde Royal Hospital in Greenock, Scotland.A nurse on the ward took her to a bay but then drew back the curtains to reveal an empty bed. The nurse then confessed he didn't where the body was. Shocked: Billie McLaughlin, pictured left with her husband Frank, was stunned when she asked hospital staff to see the body of her deceased stepfather Terry Brady, right, but was then told they didn't know where it was Mrs McLaughlin said: 'It was disturbing. The nurse led us to his bed on the ward and opened the curtains, but the bed was empty. 'Then he started shouting down the corridor to the other nurses, asking where he'd been moved to.'As if it wasn't hard enough being told he was dead without that. 'This was a senior nurse and he had no idea where one of his patients was. We found it all completely unprofessional, insensitive and distressing.'She eventually saw the body after other staff members tracked it down to a private room on the same ward.

Earlier this month, NHS bosses wrote to Mrs McLaughlin and husband Frank apologising for the blunder claiming it was 'unacceptable' and fell short of their standards.But the fuming family are now set for a face-to-face meeting with hospital chiefs to address a host of other complaints they have about his care during his three-week stay at the Larkfield Unit, based at the NHS's Inverclyde Royal Hospital, in September.
elite glass curtains elviria Blunder: A spokesperson for NHS Greater Glasgow apologised 'unreservedly' to the family for the error at Inverclyde Royal Hospital in Greenock, Scotland
toile de jouy curtains 90x90 The couple, from Greenock, allege Mr Brady didn't receive proper medication, was left unwashed and had problems with his feeding tube.'He was left to die without dignity,' Mr McLaughlin, 60, said.
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'I've seen dogs being treated better.'We went to the hospital every day and were shocked by the number of mistakes being made.'One day Terry hadn't been given his medication, the next he hadn't been washed. He wore a PEG feeding tube which became dislodged and there were a series of errors in booking him in for surgery to have that resolved.
tesco curtains 90x90And then to top it all off, we went to see him after he died and the nurses didn't know where he was.'We put our trust in the Health Service to look after Terry, but it failed him.'Mrs McLaughlin added: 'The NHS doesn't seem to be accepting much responsibility.'We received a letter responding to the complaint, but there was very little by way of apology - and it was full of mistakes.
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Anger: Mr and Mrs McLaughlinhave also submitted several other complaints about the treatment Mr Brady received while at the hospital 'At one point, it refers to my stepdad being reviewed by a doctor on October 9 - but he was dead and buried by then.'He died on September 9.
dritz curtain grommets rustic brownThe fact that they can get details like that wrong just made us even more upset.'Margaret Watt, Chair of Scotland Patients Association, said: 'This is shocking and totally unacceptable.'We hear so many cases of patients being shifted around hospitals and the staff not having a clue where they are, and it shouldn't be happening - especially with someone who is deceased.'This must have been very upsetting and stressful for the family. Mistakes like these shouldn't be happening.'A spokesperson for NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde said: 'Our Interim Director of Rehabilitation and Assessment wrote to the family addressing their concerns including the misunderstanding on where their father's body was after he had died.