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Home / Health / 'Del Boy' Surgeon Left Trail of Injury at Top Hospital

'Del Boy' Surgeon Left Trail of Injury at Top Hospital

31 Jan

Summary

  • 94 children suffered harm, with 36 cases severe, due to unnecessary surgeries.
  • Parents' concerns were repeatedly dismissed by hospital staff over several years.
  • The surgeon moved to Dubai after voluntarily surrendering his UK medical license.
'Del Boy' Surgeon Left Trail of Injury at Top Hospital

A report has revealed that 94 children endured harm, with 36 cases classified as severe, due to the actions of orthopaedic surgeon Yaser Jabbar at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) between 2017 and 2022. Many of these procedures were unnecessary, leading to misplaced implants, bone injuries, and permanent deformities.

Jabbar, known as the 'Del Boy' doctor, performed complex limb surgeries on vulnerable children, some as young as four months old. Despite multiple parental concerns and warnings from colleagues as early as 2020, hospital management failed to act decisively for years. Parents reported feeling dismissed and unheard.

Following investigations, Jabbar voluntarily surrendered his UK medical license in late 2022 and relocated to Dubai. He later left a role there in September 2024. GOSH has issued a profound apology and stated significant changes have been made to its orthopaedic services.

The Metropolitan Police are reviewing the report to assess if further action is required. Families affected are pursuing civil actions, grappling with the physical and psychological trauma inflicted upon their children.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The report revealed that 94 children endured harm, with 36 cases severe, due to unnecessary surgeries and misplaced implants performed by Yaser Jabbar between 2017 and 2022.
Yaser Jabbar was dubbed the 'Del Boy' doctor because he inflicted life-changing injuries and irreparable damage on vulnerable children under his care through unnecessary and harmful surgical procedures.
Great Ormond Street Hospital has issued a profound apology and stated that significant changes have been made to its orthopaedic service and across the hospital.

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