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Pernicious authority and poor administration or just bad journalism? : Comments
By Jocelynne Scutt, published 24/1/2013The 2DayFM telephone call that had such a tragic outcome.
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Posted by Forrest Gumpp, Saturday, 2 February 2013 1:10:52 PM
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A 'hoax' call concerning a patient recently admitted to hospital is on a par with a 'hoax' call to 000 emergency services. Does anyone anywhere wonder why such public nuisance calls are rare?
What sort of person would do it? Why? Was the opportunity to embarrass the Royals, so jealously hated by some, so enticing that it was 'game on' regardless? There is no excusing the arrogant, insensitive decision makers and participants in this 'hoax'. That something else went wrong was on the cards. That is not to blame for a particular tragedy, but it does confirm that 'tricking' hospitals and emergency agencies who deal with events involving personal tragedy and personal harm is fraught with risk. Of course hospitals, helping services and emergency agencies will always be susceptible to abuse by public nuisances. It is not adequate to argue that they have some contributory responsibility or could have prevented the perpetrators from committing the offence. Since when is a victim responsible for a crime or nuisance committed against them? It is outrageous that anyone would seek to excuse and defend this sorry incident. Posted by onthebeach, Saturday, 2 February 2013 2:40:38 PM
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Dr Scutt, in her justifiable pursuit of realism in divining the reasons explaining why the hoax call elicited the response it did, can be forgiven for not mentioning the role that the time of day (5:30AM) at receipt of the call may have played, should she have been unaware as to it, given the absolutely appallingly sketchy (and frequently contradictory) reporting as to the hoax, as is referenced in her article title.
As her article stands in isolation, she draws a long bow in seeking to connect the 'royalty trumps protocol' explanation of the hoax' success to inferences as to erstwhile concealment of the extent of exercise of Royal prerogatives with respect to the grant of assent to proposed legislation within the UK. Her highlighted text link 'extent of senior royals veto' in the 18th paragraph delivers the viewer, via one of those off-putting extensive tract-like web pages, to a news item that appeared in the UK Guardian newspaper - the item appears around one sixth of the way down the scroll bar of that rather long web page screen display. (Here is a direct link for the reader's convenience: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/jan/14/secret-papers-royals-veto-bills ) A recent tweet by Australian lawyer (and OLO author) Greg Barns, however, also serves to spotlight the possible relationship of the exercise of Royal authority in matters tangential to what, on Twitter, had become known as the '#royalprank'. Greg tweeted this link, http://t.co/7jayxftH , to a SMH news item that announced that there would be no charges laid by the UK Crown Prosecution Service with respect to the hoax. Barns alleged in his tweet that involvement of Buckingham Palace had been behind the reference of the case to the CPS in the first case. Viewers can see the Twitter conversation here: http://noplaceforsheep.com/2012/12/13/the-hospital-and-the-radio-station-when-management-fails-who-pays-the-price/#comment-62594 The UK CPS was quoted as saying "However misguided, the telephone call was intended as a harmless prank.", and that "... any potential prosecution would not be in the public interest". Some very strange circumstances came to light following the discovery of the death of nurse Jacintha Saldanha, however. Another blogger's view: http://bwican.blogspot.com.au/2012/12/casualty-ward-off.html#!/2012/12/casualty-ward-off.html Posted by Forrest Gumpp, Sunday, 3 February 2013 11:40:30 AM
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As it happened, I observed the reaction on Twitter to the breaking news of the discovery of nurse Saldanha's death in real time, and posted upon it in a now-archived OLO General Discussion topic, here: http://forum.onlineopinion.com.au/thread.asp?discussion=5530#150676
One of the strange circumstances referred to in my preceeding post was that the Twitter accounts of the two DJs were closed within minutes of the news breaking as to the nurse's death, but that recordings of the making of the prank call continued to be rebroadcasted by 2DayFM. That circumstance is evidenced by a Twitter conversation embedded in this post on another blog: http://noplaceforsheep.com/2012/12/13/the-hospital-and-the-radio-station-when-management-fails-who-pays-the-price/#comment-59643 The timestamps in that Twitter conversation are showing the time and date in London, 4:14PM Friday 7 December 2012. In Australia, 11 hours ahead of GMT at this time of year, where the closure of the Twitter accounts of the DJs was presumably effected, it was 3:14AM on Saturday 8 December 2012. It would be very interesting to know whether the DJs were awake at that hour on the weekend to delete their Twitter accounts themselves, or whether someone in '@2DayFMSydney' management monitoring developments, and having the passwords, deleted the accounts. I think the latter is most likely. Such Twitter reaction as there was was less spontaneous than it was MSM-driven, and directed to @2DayFMSydney and the Twitter hashtag conversation '#royalprank' once it became established. Reaction may have been considered large by Australian standards, but it largely came from Europe, then North America, where the news broke on the morning of Friday 7 December, as witnessed by the timestamps on the majority of tweets. Consider what may be revealed, however, by this sequence of (embedded) Twitter conversations: http://noplaceforsheep.com/2012/12/13/the-hospital-and-the-radio-station-when-management-fails-who-pays-the-price/#comment-59385 http://noplaceforsheep.com/2012/12/13/the-hospital-and-the-radio-station-when-management-fails-who-pays-the-price/#comment-59403 http://noplaceforsheep.com/2012/12/13/the-hospital-and-the-radio-station-when-management-fails-who-pays-the-price/#comment-60512 Was the Daily Mail, in posting what turned out to be its INDIAN online edition WITHOUT any comments just after the initial comment removal, trying to disguise the fact that the target of its comment-removal exercise was JUST ONE COMMENT to its UK edition that told all, or certainly told far too much, as to the whole prank FROM THE VERY BEGINNING perhaps being a largely UK-media inspired event? Posted by Forrest Gumpp, Wednesday, 13 February 2013 9:40:53 AM
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At this point, in remarking upon the seeming absence of call-handling protocols being in place at the hospital, she seems to ignore a most basic aspect of the reality surrounding the event, the time difference between Australia, from where the call originated, and London, where the hospital was located. The hoax call was received at around 5:30AM GMT!
It is not hard to imagine that at that hour the reception switchboard may not have been attended by staff trained in the protocols of handling enquiries. The record claims that it was a nurse, Jacintha Saldanha, who put the call through to the ward, from where the second, unidentified, nurse passed on information as to the condition of Cate, Duchess of Cambridge, to the hoaxers. The circumstance of the time of day alone would provide a substantial explanation for the apparent absence of call-handling protocols by non-reception (ie. night shift nursing) staff.
In the light of hindsight, it may be thought that with such prominent persons admitted as patients it may have been more prudent to have had the reception switchboard manned 24/7. Such has been the drip-feed of relevant information from the MSM in this case that the public does not even know what, if any, instructions had been given to nursing staff as to the taking of phone calls. It is not even clear as to whether the shift was nurse Saldanha's regular one, or one upon which she was standing-in for someone else perhaps more familiar with procedures for that hour at short notice. There had been problems.