Nurse who had suspicions about Harold Shipman in 1970s says she was too naive to raise concerns

Harold Shipman was arrested 20-years ago - PA
Harold Shipman was arrested 20-years ago - PA

A nurse who worked alongside mass serial killer Harold Shipman has said she could have stopped him 30-years ago but was too young and naive to raise her concerns about him.

Sandra Whitehead, was 18 in 1972, when she worked alongside Shipman at Pontefract General Infirmary.

The teenager said she became suspicious about Shipman following the deaths of three patients who Shipman had been looking after.

But she said she lacked the confidence to raise her concerns with hospital management and has spent years haunted by her inaction.

Speaking on an ITV documentary, Harold Shipman: Doctor Death: to mark the 20th anniversary since his arrest, she said “One night we had three deaths, we just went from room to room and the patient had died.

Harold Shipman was arrested 20-years ago
Harold Shipman was arrested 20-years ago

“It just didn’t seem any reason. They were ill but they didn’t look on death’s door. It just seemed a high proportion of deaths out of a 32-bedded ward.

“I think I was too young and too naïve, I didn’t have the knowledge and experience to maybe turn round and see senior management and say, ‘I am not happy about this.’”

Sandra Whitehead worked with Shipman in the early 1970s and was suspicious about his at the time
Sandra Whitehead worked with Shipman in the early 1970s and was suspicious about his at the time

Following his conviction in 2000 for 15 murders, Ms Whitehead provided information to a public inquiry which helped uncovered further victims from his time at Pontefract General Hospital.

It is estimated that Shipman may have secretly poisoned more than 250 of his patients across three decades before his eventual arrest in 1998.

Harold Shipman is thought to have killed more than 250 patients
Harold Shipman is thought to have killed more than 250 patients

A former detective who investigated Shipman in 1975 for drug offences, has described his amazement that he was not struck off the General Medical Register at the time.

George McKeating said he had been about to give evidence to the GMC hearing when he was told it had already finished and the panel had decided he was not a danger to the public.

He said: "I was a bit flabbergasted to say the least. In my experience addicts very rarely rehabilitate.”

Harold Shipman: Doctor Death is on ITV at 9pm on Thursday 26 April