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Patient Safety Champion Honored for Martha's Rule
13 Jun
Summary
- Merope Mills awarded CBE for pioneering patient safety initiative.
- Martha's Rule allows second opinions to potentially save lives.
- The rule has potentially saved over 500 lives since 2024.

Merope Mills, a senior editor at The Guardian and a dedicated healthcare campaigner, has been honored with a CBE in the King's Birthday Honours list for her significant contributions to patient safety.
Mills was instrumental in establishing Martha's Rule, a crucial patient safety initiative implemented in England in 2024. This rule empowers patients, their families, and healthcare staff to request a second medical opinion when they have concerns about a patient's care.
The campaign was deeply personal for Mills, stemming from the tragic death of her 13-year-old daughter, Martha, in 2021. Martha died at King's College hospital in London due to failures in identifying and treating sepsis, a condition that a coroner later determined was likely treatable had it been caught earlier.
Since its introduction, Martha's Rule has demonstrated a profound impact, with estimates suggesting it has potentially saved over 500 lives. Health Secretary Wes Streeting previously acknowledged that over 500 individuals received life-saving care after the mechanism was triggered, highlighting a cultural shift within the NHS towards prioritizing patient and family involvement in care decisions.