A FATHER from Newton Abbot whose three-year-old son died from sepsis has told a commons select committee that a culture of blame means errors are sometimes covered up instead of lessons being learned.

Scott Morrish’s son Sam died from severe sepsis in 2012.

Sam’s symptoms were missed and a report found he was ‘failed’ by four different healthcare organisations who missed vital warning signs.

Now Scott has told a Health Select Committee Hearing in London his grief was made worse by being let down by the NHS complaints system.

He said: ‘There was a massive reluctance to look at the details’

Speaking at the hearing, he said: ‘In trying to understand that loss and why he died, there was a massive reluctance to look at the details of what had happened on the night he died.

‘I think what should have taken six or seven days just to establish what had happened and why he had died ended up initially taking six months to get a form of local investigation response but actually took six and a half years.’

Sam initially had flu which developed into the bacterial infection, sepsis.

Sepsis is a treatable condition if antibiotics are given early enough, but after four health services missed the warning signs, Sam died at Torbay Hospital.

A previous ombudsman report said Sam and his family were ‘failed’ by these organisations, saying he could have survived if he had been treated properly.

The report said: ‘Sadly, this case demonstrates once again that a failure to rapidly diagnose and treat sepsis can have tragic consequences.

‘We have found that had Sam received appropriate care and treatment, he would have survived, and that a lack of appropriate and timely bereavement support compounded the distress caused to his family as a result of the failures in care.

‘We have also found failures in the way that the NHS investigated the events that took place, and that this caused the family a further injustice.’

At the Health and Social Care Committee meeting, Scott said families like his are regularly failed by the complaints system.

He said litigious processes sometimes take years to resolve.

He said instead of the NHS learning from mistakes, there seems to be a culture of trying to cover up mistakes.

Chairman of the Health and Social Care Committee, Jeremy Hunt, said the NHS spent £10billion on compensation claims and legal costs last year which were related to clinical negligence.

He said: ‘These are obviously vast sums of money for the taxpayer and that is money that is not being spent on patient care, but is the legal process actually serving its purpose for families?

‘Families also complain about the time taken for things to be resolved with a typical family waiting on average 11 and a half years for a case to be resolved.’