Martha's Rule is a patient safety initiative being implemented in English NHS hospitals from April 2024. It gives patients, families, carers and staff in hospitals who have concerns about a patient's deteriorating condition access to a rapid review from a critical care outreach team.[1] Similar measures have been instituted in Australia, Denmark and the United States, and a programme called "Call 4 Concern" was previously trialled in the United Kingdom.[2] Martha's Rule is also a 'cultural intervention', which will help to flatten hierarchies within medicine, improve listening and openness on the part of clinicians and give patients and their families greater agency.[3]
In the summer of 2021, 13-year-old Martha Mills fell off her bike, injuring her pancreas. She was admitted to King's College Hospital (KCH) in London, where she was under the care of the paediatric liver team.[4] She remained on the ward as her condition deteriorated. She died of septic shock on 31 August 2021, a few days before her 14th birthday.[5]
KCH's Serious Incident Investigation Report found that there were five occasions when it would have been appropriate to involve the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU).[6] Had she been moved to PICU, where a bed was available, observation and treatment would have been different.[7] In 2022, a coroner ruled that Martha would most likely have survived if KCH's liver team had transferred her to PICU. KCH admitted a breach of its duty of care and apologised for mistakes made.[8]
Martha Mills's mother, Merope Mills, is a journalist, editor of The Guardian Saturday magazine and a Guardian executive editor. In September 2022, Mills wrote about Martha and her treatment at KCH in an article for the Guardian. The article was widely read and has been studied in medical schools.[9] A year later, in September 2023, Mills gave an interview on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, telling the story of Martha's treatment and making the case for Martha's Rule.[10] Within a day of the broadcast, Martha's Rule was discussed in the House of Commons. Within two weeks both the Conservative[11] and Labour parties supported the initiative. The then Shadow Secretary of State for Health, Wes Streeting, said that he was moved to tears by the BBC interview.[12] Within two weeks, The Times,[13] Daily Telegraph,[14] Guardian[15] and Daily Mail[16] had backed the campaign. The BMJ ran several pieces on Martha's Rule and the editor-in-chief wrote in support of the initiative.[17]
In the Guardian Mills wrote that she and Martha's father, Paul Laity, had raised concerns about Martha's deterioration, but their opinions were ignored or dismissed by the consultants and junior doctors on Rays of Sunshine Ward at KCH.[18] She recounted that Martha developed severe sepsis six days before she died, one symptom of which was that she bled copiously from the tubes in her arms and stomach.[19] Despite this, the liver team kept her on the ward. Mills expressly voiced her fear that Martha would die of septic shock over the bank holiday weekend, when the consultants 'weren't around'. Mills and Laity were never told Martha had sepsis, and other symptoms were kept from them and left untreated. In attempting to explain the resistance to involving PICU in Martha's care, independent investigators commissioned by KCH said that it was 'ingrained in the culture' of the paediatric liver consultants that inviting an ICU doctor to look at Martha would have been 'a sign of weakness'. Martha developed a rash which was misdiagnosed, but when Mills raised a concern, she was told to 'trust the doctors'. The liver team failed to observe hospital protocol and take into account Mills's anxiety about her daughter. Henrietta Hughes, the Patient Safety Commissioner, has written that the 'tragic death of Martha is a clear example of epistemic injustice, where the views and voices of patients are not heard and acted on. The information and insights from Martha's parents were not believed, were undervalued, or were not understood – but it is not an isolated case.'
Following the significant public response to the Guardian article, Mills and Laity were asked by the think-tank Demos to work jointly on a patient safety initiative designed to learn from Martha's death.[20] After research and a meeting with NHS representatives and other health stakeholders, the decision was taken to concentrate on Martha's Rule. Mills had been approached by health workers in Australia, who told her about Ryan's Rule, a similar patient safety process in Queensland, Australia,[21] which provided the inspiration for the name Martha's Rule.[22] Martha's Rule also draws on Call 4 Concern, an initiative introduced in a number of British hospitals.
In September 2023, the then Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Steve Barclay, asked Henrietta Hughes, the Patient Safety Commissioner, to work on an implementation plan for Martha's Rule. After four 'sprint' meetings involving NHS Trusts, the Health Ombudsman, the Care Quality Commission, the General Medical Council, the Patients Association and other bodies, Hughes submitted her recommendations to the Secretary of State on 20 October 2023.[23] On 21 February 2024, NHS England and the Department of Health announced that the roll-out of Martha's Rule would begin with 100 hospitals from April 2024 to March 2025. These are hospitals that provide acute care and that already have round-the-clock critical care outreach capability. According to Victoria Atkins, the Secretary of State for Health, the 'introduction of Martha's Rule from April will put families at the heart of the patient's own care, recognising the critical role they have in the treatment of loved ones'. The work completed at the initial sites will inform the development of wider national policy proposals for Martha's Rule.
The 3 proposed components of Martha’s Rule are:
On 2 April the General Medical Council, Nursing and Midwifery Council, and Care Quality Commission issued a joint statement expressing their support for the implementation of Martha's Rule by NHS England.[24] The organisations stated that 'Martha's Rule reinforces the fundamental principles of listening to people who use health and care services and their families, and acting on what they say.'
Mills has argued that Martha's Rule will not only save lives but bring about a significant shift in the culture within hospitals towards patient power.[25] Mills said of her experience at Martha's bedside: 'I was "managed", I hadn't been listened to and I felt powerless ... If a patient and family escalation system such as Martha’s rule had existed – and had been clearly advertised around the hospital with posters and stickers – I’m sure I would have used it and it could well have saved Martha's life.'[26] Mills called for an increase in patient and family agency in a hospital environment – something long supported in principle by the NHS.[27] NHS England chief executive Amanda Pritchard said the programme would undoubtedly 'save lives in the future'.[28]
Some doubts were expressed in advance of the implementation of Martha's Rule regarding any attempt to frame it as the 'right' to a second opinion, which would be 'practically and conceptually fraught'.[29] It was also argued in the context of the initiative's aim to change medical culture that 'not all power imbalances' within the medical world 'are automatically and uniformly problematic'. In addition, 'requesting a second opinion exemplifies a lack of trust, and perhaps even distrust, in the clinical team'. In March 2024, the Royal College of Physicians and the British Medical Association (BMA) welcomed Martha's Rule. But Dr Vishal Sharma, chair of the BMA's consultants committee, argued that significant resource implications arose from its roll-out, given a perceived crisis in the NHS and existing staff shortages: 'For this to result in improvements for patients, it is essential that the current workforce crisis is addressed so that critical care outreach teams have the necessary staff they need to deliver this initiative. More must also be done to embed a supportive culture across the NHS where staff know they can speak up about problems and have time to listen to families and others when issues arise.'[30]
Evaluation of similar rules in other countries suggested that most uses were not related to patient safety. Calls to "Condition Help" in Pittsburgh were mostly regarding inadequate pain control, and most calls under Ryan's Rule in Australia did not lead to any change in clinical management. But a broad survey of evidence shows that initiatives such as Martha's Rule are not overused or abused by patients or families, and can result in necessary escalations which would otherwise not have occurred.[31]
The initial implementation target was to enrol at least 100 sites, but due to significant interest from frontline clinicians this has been expanded, so that the first phase of the Martha's Rule programme will be in place at 143 locations across England by March 2025.[32]