Muckamore Abbey Hospital: Inquiry into alleged patient abuse to begin

A public inquiry into allegations of abuse of patients at Muckamore Abbey Hospital will begin later on Monday.

The hospital is run by the Belfast Health Trust and provides facilities for adults with special needs.

With the terms of reference agreed, the inquiry panel will begin trying to establish what happened between residents and some members of staff, and also examine management’s role.

Seven people are facing prosecution. There have been more than 20 arrests.

It was announced in June 2021 that the inquiry will be chaired by Tom Kark QC, who played a key role in the 2010 inquiry into avoidable deaths at Stafford Hospital in England.

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“Radical reform is required at Muckamore. But there must also be accountability.”

A major police investigation began in 2017 after allegations of ill-treatment at Muckamore began to emerge.

The inquiry is to be wholly independent and not accountable to the Department of Health, the Stormont Executive, the Northern Ireland Assembly or any public body.

The core objectives are defined as “to examine the issue of abuse of patients at Muckamore Abbey Hospital (MAH), to determine why the abuse happened and the range of circumstances that allowed it to happen and ensure that such abuse does not occur again at MAH or any other institution providing similar services in Northern Ireland”.

‘Accountability’

Glynn Brown, whose son Aaron had been a patient at Muckamore, said he welcomed the fact that the inquiry process was “finally getting under way”.

“We expect it to deliver recommendations and for those recommendations to be implemented,” he said.

“The worst thing would be for any subsequent findings to gather dust on a Stormont shelf.

“Radical reform is required at Muckamore. But there must also be accountability.”

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