Transplant surgeon awaiting sentence for branding patients' livers with his initials is STILL working and carrying out operations

  • Simon Bramhall, 53, admitted burning 'SB' onto a man and a woman's livers
  • He resigned from his job in Birmingham after allegations reported in 2014 
  • But he was given a new job at an NHS trust near Hereford later that year 
  • He used argon gas in brandings, which is used to stop livers bleeding in surgery 

Surgeon Simon Bramhall, pictured, who is awaiting sentence for branding patients' livers with his initials, is still employed as a doctor with Wye Valley NHS Trust

Surgeon Simon Bramhall, pictured, who is awaiting sentence for branding patients' livers with his initials, is still employed as a doctor with Wye Valley NHS Trust

A surgeon who admitted marking his initials on the livers of two patients during transplant operations is still working and carrying out operations for the NHS.

Consultant Simon Bramhall, 53, pleaded guilty to a charge of assault by beating at Birmingham Crown Court after being accused of branding one man and one woman's livers with 'SB' during transplant surgery in 2013.

He resigned from his job at the hospital in 2014, he was given a new job at Wye Valley NHS Trust near Hereford that same year, where he has been employed ever since.

A spokesman for the trust said the incident happened prior to his employment and he does not carry out liver procedures for them.

The spokesman said: ‘The welfare and safety of patients is the Trust’s priority. We expect the highest standard of conduct from our consultants and have systems and processes to monitor this.

‘The activities took place prior to Mr Bramhall joining Wye Valley NHS Trust.

‘Mr Bramhall does not carry out liver transplants at WVT.’

Bramhall also pleaded not guilty to alternative charges of assault occasioning actual bodily harm at yesterday's hearing.

After Bramhall's pleas were entered, prosecutor Tony Badenoch QC said the Crown accepted the medic's not guilty pleas in a case which was 'without legal precedent in criminal law'.

Bramhall, who appeared in the dock wearing a pink shirt and dark suit, was granted unconditional bail and will be sentenced on January 12.

Bramhall, left, pictured outside court, used argon gas, which is supposed to be an aid to prevent bleeding during surgery
Bramhall pleaded not guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm, which the prosecution accepted

Bramhall, left, pictured left outside court with a female companion, and right, used argon gas, which is supposed to be an aid to prevent bleeding during surgery

He was employed at Wye Valley NHS Trust in 2014, pictured, the same year he resigned from his previous position

He was employed at Wye Valley NHS Trust in 2014, pictured, the same year he resigned from his previous position

The incidents took place while he worked at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, where he was a liver, spleen and pancreatic surgeon for 12 years. 

Liver surgeons use argon beam coagulators to stop livers bleeding during operations, but they can also be used to highlight the area of the organ due to be worked on.

It is not harmful and the marks usually disappear by themselves, but when the female patient had a follow-up operation doctors saw they had not healed and saw the initials there instead.

Consultant Simon Bramhall (pictured), 53, admitted branding one man and one woman's livers with 'SB' during transplant surgery in 2013

Judge Paul Farrer allowed Bramhall to stand in front of the dock, in the well of the court, as the surgeon pleaded guilty to assaulting a patient whose name is protected by a court order during an operation in August 2013.

He also entered a guilty plea relating to an operation performed on an unknown patient in February of the same year.

Addressing the court after the pleas, Mr Badenoch said: 'This has been a highly unusual and complex case, both within the expert medical testimony served by both sides and in law.

'It is factually, so far as we have been able to establish, without legal precedent in criminal law.'

The barrister added that Bramhall was employed as a consultant surgeon in Birmingham at the time of the transplant operations and that both patients had been under anaesthetic.

'The pleas of guilty now entered represent an acceptance that that which he did was not just ethically wrong but criminally wrong,' Mr Badenoch told the court.

'They reflect the fact that Dr Bramhall's initialling on a patient's liver was not an isolated incident but rather a repeated act on two occasions, requiring some skill and concentration. It was done in the presence of colleagues.'

Describing the offences as an abuse of position, Mr Badenoch said they had been carried out with a disregard for the feelings of unconscious patients.

The prosecutor said of the assaults: 'It was an intentional application of unlawful force to a patient whilst anaesthetised.

The  incidents took place while he worked at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham (pictured), where he was a liver, spleen and pancreatic surgeon for 12 years

The incidents took place while he worked at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham (pictured), where he was a liver, spleen and pancreatic surgeon for 12 years

'His acts in marking the livers of those patients were deliberate and conscious acts.

'Suffice to say, for current purposes, these pleas meet the broad public interest.

'It will be for others to decide whether and to what extent his fitness to practise is impaired.'

The offence of assault by beating was brought against Bramhall to reflect the act of marking the liver and there is no suggestion that he was responsible for physically 'beating' either patient. 

Adjourning the case for a pre-sentence report, Judge Farrer told Bramhall: 'For reasons that you are aware of, I am not going to sentence you today.

'The prosecution need to do further work. Your legal team need to do further work in terms of completing the documents that you wish to place before me in due course.' 

Bramhall, of Redditch, Worcestershire, was accused of causing actual bodily harm against a female patient on February 9 2013 and a male patient four months later on August 21.

He was suspended by the University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust after the allegations came to light. 

A spokesman for the trust told MailOnline he no longer works there. 

He resigned in 2014, with the trust commenting at the time: 'During the course of an internal disciplinary investigation into the conduct of Mr Simon Bramhall, the consultant liver surgeon has tendered his resignation which has been accepted by the trust.' 

While he worked there he was also involved in tutoring and examining medical students and supervising postgraduate students.  

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