The Belfast Health Trust's Apology: What Led to the Recall
In a recent development shaking the Northern Ireland health service, the Belfast Health Trust has issued a formal apology to patients potentially subjected to unnecessary cardiac procedures. The issue centres on the implantation of Cardiac Resynchronisation Therapy (CRT) devices, specialist heart implants designed to help advanced heart failure patients by synchronising the heart's ventricles. A comprehensive review revealed that up to 163 individuals out of 684 who received these devices between 2007 and 2023 may not have met the strict clinical criteria for the procedure. This recall, affecting patients treated primarily by consultant cardiologist Dr Ernest Lau, has sparked concerns over decision-making processes and delayed responses to earlier warnings.
The trust's medical director, Chris Hagan, expressed regret for any distress caused, emphasising that the devices themselves are safe and no immediate action is required from patients. Letters have been dispatched to affected individuals, inviting them to specialised clinics for reassessment. With 25 patients contacted initially and another 35 this week, the process is methodical to manage capacity effectively.
Understanding Cardiac Resynchronisation Therapy (CRT)
Cardiac Resynchronisation Therapy, often abbreviated as CRT, is a proven treatment for a subset of heart failure patients. Heart failure occurs when the heart muscle weakens and cannot pump blood efficiently, leading to symptoms like shortness of breath, fatigue, swelling in the legs, and fluid buildup in the lungs. In specific cases, known as dyssynchrony, the heart's left and right ventricles fail to contract in harmony, exacerbating the condition.
A CRT device functions like an advanced pacemaker. Surgically implanted under the skin below the collarbone, it connects via three leads: one to the right atrium, one to the right ventricle, and one to the left ventricle via the coronary sinus vein. The device delivers timed electrical impulses to coordinate contractions, improving pumping efficiency, reducing symptoms, and potentially extending life expectancy. According to clinical guidelines, CRT is recommended for patients with moderate to severe symptoms (New York Heart Association class II-IV), left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of 35% or less, and prolonged QRS duration on ECG indicating dyssynchrony.

While effective—studies show up to 70% of suitable patients experience symptom improvement—the procedure carries risks including infection (1-2%), lead dislodgement (5%), and battery replacement every 5-10 years. NICE guidelines in the UK strictly define eligibility to ensure benefits outweigh these risks. Deviations from these criteria form the basis of the current concerns at Belfast Trust.
Dr Ernest Lau and the Clinical Decisions Under Scrutiny
Dr Ernest Lau, a consultant cardiologist and electrophysiologist at the Belfast Trust, performed many of the CRT implantations in question. An employee since at least 2007, he specialises in complex rhythm management. Colleagues first raised concerns about his patient selection for CRT in 2020, but substantive action followed only a patient complaint in 2023. Dr Lau has not treated patients since then but remains on the payroll pending the review.
The Royal College of Physicians (RCP), notified by the trust, conducted an independent expert review of cases from 2007 onwards. Applying predefined thresholds—likely aligned with NICE criteria such as LVEF, QRS width, and NYHA class—the RCP flagged 163 cases for potential non-eligibility. This represents about 24% of CRT implants by Dr Lau during the period, a notably high proportion warranting investigation.
A Troubled Timeline: From Warnings to Recall
The sequence of events highlights systemic delays common in NHS whistleblower scenarios:
- 2007-2023: CRT implants proceed under Dr Lau's care.
- 2020: Colleague concerns emerge but not escalated promptly.
- 2023: Patient complaint triggers trust notification to RCP; Dr Lau sidelined from clinics.
- 2023-2024: RCP review identifies issues, recommends deeper probe.
- May 2026: Patient letters begin, recall clinics established; public apology issued.
This three-year lag from initial flags to patient contact has frustrated staff and alarmed patients, echoing criticisms of slow accountability in public health systems.
Patient Experiences and Emotional Toll
While specific testimonies are emerging, relatives of recalled patients report significant anxiety. One family member described the letter as 'devastating', reopening wounds from years of managing heart failure. The trust has set up a helpline (028 9615 0100) for queries, operating extended hours over the May 15-17 weekend. Clinics offer face-to-face reviews, ECGs, and device checks where needed. Importantly, no deaths have been linked to the implants thus far, and records of deceased patients are under review.
For those with devices, daily life continues unchanged—many report benefits like increased energy. However, the psychological impact of questioning medical necessity cannot be understated, particularly amid Northern Ireland's strained health services.
Photo by Ronda Dorsey on Unsplash
Belfast Trust's Response and Safety Measures
The trust prioritises transparency, contacting patients in batches to avoid overwhelming services. Medical director Hagan stated: 'We apologise for any distress... CRT devices are safe.' No device removals are advised routinely; decisions follow individual assessments. The review extends to all 684 cases for completeness.
Internally, the trust reviews HR aspects but declines details on Dr Lau. Broader audits ensure guideline adherence moving forward.
The full BBC coverage provides firsthand trust statements.Heart Disease Burden in Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland faces a cardiovascular 'ticking time bomb'. British Heart Foundation data shows 350 monthly deaths from heart conditions, with circulatory diseases causing 21% of fatalities in 2026. About 20% of adults have high blood pressure, and 5.6% live with chronic heart issues. Heart failure prevalence rises 12% since 2020.

Waiting times exacerbate risks: elective cardiac surgery up to 6 months, emergency department medians over 3 hours. This context amplifies the CRT scandal's gravity—scarce resources must target truly needy patients.
BHF UK CVD factsheet details national trends.Lessons from Historical NHS Cardiac Scandals
This incident recalls infamous cases:
- Bristol Heart Scandal (1990s): High paediatric mortality due to substandard surgery; inquiry exposed 'club culture' and poor oversight.
- Leeds General Infirmary (2014): Trust apologised for paediatric cardiology failings.
- St George's Hospital (2018-2022): 'Toxic feud' among surgeons led to 67 preventable deaths; unwarranted restrictions caused delays.
Common threads: whistleblower suppression, delayed probes, cultural silos. The RCP's role, as here, proves vital for impartiality.
Regulatory Framework and RCP's Role
The RCP conducts invited reviews for NHS trusts, assessing clinical governance. Here, it validated concerns post-trust referral. NICE TA314 outlines CRT indications precisely, mandating multidisciplinary decisions. GMC may investigate Dr Lau if fitness-to-practise issues arise. Patients can complain via the Ombudsman or seek legal advice for potential compensation.
NICE TA314 on CRT and ICDs.Patient Rights and Next Steps
Affected individuals should:
- Monitor for trust correspondence.
- Contact the helpline for updates.
- Attend offered clinics; prepare symptom history.
- Consider second opinions via GP referrals.
Support groups like BHF offer resources. Long-term, enhanced audits and AI-assisted eligibility checks could prevent recurrences.
Photo by Joshua Hoehne on Unsplash
Future Outlook for Cardiac Care in the NHS
The scandal underscores needs for swifter whistleblower protections, real-time data analytics for procedure justification, and expanded electrophysiology training. With UK heart deaths at 7/10 surviving attacks (up from 1960s), proactive prevention—smoking cessation, hypertension management—is key. Belfast Trust vows reforms; national policy may follow, ensuring patient-first care amid resource strains.
Stakeholders, from patients to policymakers, must collaborate for a safer system, turning this setback into systemic strength.
