Brit nurse who ‘bedded three cancer victims” husbands’ sacked

London, March 10 (ANI): A nurse has been fired from a UK hospital amid claims she bedded three men whose cancer-stricken wives she cared for in their final days.

Sara Dale, 39, who worked for UK cancer support charity Macmillans, was also ‘debadged’ by the group.

The attractive divorcee met the men through her job at Queen Elizabeth NHS Hospital in King”s Lynn, Norfolk.

Their terminally-ill wives were being treated there and after they died she embarked on relationships with the grieving widowers.

She currently lives with Stephen Ellis, 50, whose long-term partner Mel died of cancer last year.

“Sara was a very popular member of the team at the hospital. When the allegations surfaced people were genuinely shocked,” the Sun quoted an NHS source as saying.

“She has been off work for some time but her colleagues were only told she had been dismissed a couple of weeks ago.

“It has been kept quite hush-hush although word quickly got round about the allegations against her.

“Macmillan nurses do an amazing job in supporting cancer patients day in day out. And this is a really unfortunate episode,” the source added. (ANI)

NRI woman died after ‘banned’ surgeon cut artery: Reports

LONDON: An NRI woman died of excessive bleeding after a surgeon, who had previously been banned from performing spinal surgery, damaged an artery attached to her heart during an operation, reports here said.

Satwant Vohra (55), from Welwyn, Hertfodshire bled to death after her aorta was ruptured following the surgery on a damaged disc in her back at a private hospital, an inquest was told on Tuesday.

Chinh Nguyen, the 43-year-old surgeon who performed the operation, had been earlier banned from carrying out spinal surgery. He was also jailed last month for five years on charges of laundering millions in profit from a network of cannabis farms.

The ban was put on Nguyen for a year after five cases, including one in which a patient nearly died, raised concerns.

Nguyen admitted that he may have injured Vohra’s aorta at the Garden Hospital in Hendon, north London, last December.

The inquest heard that Vohra’s condition started to deteriorate after the operation. She was taken to National Health Service (NHS) hospital but doctors could not stem the bleeding, The Daily Telegraph reported.

Recording a narrative verdict, coroner Andrew Walker said, “There were no intensive care facilities available and Mrs Vohra was transferred to an NHS hospital where two operations to save her life took place, but sadly she died.”