Disclaimer: This article is provided for general information and awareness purposes only and does not constitute medical, legal, or professional advice. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy at the time of publication, readers should not rely on this content as a substitute for seeking advice from qualified healthcare professionals, legal practitioners, or relevant authorities. If you or your child has been affected by any medical treatment discussed, please seek independent medical guidance and, where appropriate, specialist legal advice. Disabled Entrepreneur UK is not responsible for decisions made based on this content.
An independent review uncovers life-changing harm to children, highlighting the voices of families and the urgent need for healthcare reform.
A major independent review into the clinical practice of orthopaedic surgeon Dr Yaser Jabbar has concluded that at least 94 children were harmed under his care at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) between 2017 and 2022, raising urgent questions about patient safety, oversight, and accountability in specialist children’s healthcare.
Who Was Dr Yaser Jabbar?
Dr Yaser Jabbar was a consultant orthopaedic surgeon at GOSH whose speciality was lower limb reconstruction, including leg lengthening, deformity correction, and complex bone procedures in children. Over his five-year tenure, he treated hundreds of young patients with congenital and acquired limb conditions.
He no longer holds a licence to practise in the UK and is understood to be living abroad.
What Did the Review Find?
Great Ormond Street Hospital commissioned an independent review, led by expert paediatric orthopaedic surgeons from other UK hospitals, to assess the care given to all of Dr Jabbar’s patients, nearly 800 in total.
The review found that:
- 94 children were harmed as a result of care provided by Dr Jabbar.
- Of those, 36 suffered severe harm, 39 moderate harm, and 19 mild harm.
- Cases included poor surgical planning and technique, incorrect bone cuts, misplacement of implants, and premature removal of medical devices.
- Records were often incomplete or unclear, and families reported insufficient counselling about risks and alternatives before procedures.
Types of Harm Suffered
Children harmed by these procedures have reported serious, life-altering consequences, including:
- Chronic pain and physical disability
- Severe nerve damage or muscle injury
- Permanent deformities or functional impairment
- Avoidable amputations and additional corrective surgeries
- Psychological trauma and loss of quality of life
One young patient, James Wood, now aged 19, underwent surgery at age 12 to stretch knee tissues and lengthen his Achilles tendon. After the operation, he developed extreme pain and vascular damage because a pin from a surgical frame protruded into his thigh, an outcome the review linked to “poor surgical skill.”
Families Left in Distress
Parents and caregivers have described the impact as devastating, physically, emotionally, and financially. Many say they were not adequately informed about the true risks or benefits of the procedures, leaving them feeling blindsided by complications that continue to affect their children’s lives.
Several families had raised concerns internally at the hospital years earlier, only to feel ignored or dismissed, an issue that the independent review has highlighted as part of broader systemic failings.
Hospital Response and Accountability
In its statement, Great Ormond Street Hospital apologised to affected patients and families and acknowledged that care provided under Dr Jabbar fell below expected standards. The hospital has pledged to learn from the findings and implement changes aimed at strengthening surgical governance and patient safety.
The review’s publication also triggers offers of psychological support for affected families and ongoing dialogue about corrective care.
Meanwhile, media reports indicate that the Metropolitan Police are reviewing the findings to determine whether further action is appropriate.
Why This Matters
This case underscores profound issues in how serious clinical concerns are identified and acted upon, not just at GOSH, but across specialised NHS services.
Key lessons include:
- The need for stronger monitoring of surgical outcomes at departmental and national levels
- Better support and protection for clinicians who raise early warnings
- Full transparency for families when procedures go wrong
- A renewed focus on patient-centred consent and risk communication
For many families, the review comes long after lasting harm was done. But by exposing the failures that allowed this to happen, there’s an opportunity to push for systemic changes that protect future patients and uphold trust in healthcare.
Conclusion
For the families affected, this review is not merely an administrative exercise; it reflects years of preventable harm, unanswered concerns, and children left with lifelong consequences. While apologies and promises of reform are important, they cannot undo the damage already done. What this case makes painfully clear is that early warnings were missed, oversight mechanisms failed, and opportunities to intervene were lost. Accountability must extend beyond individual clinicians to include institutional governance, clinical leadership, and regulatory systems that allow unsafe practice to continue unchecked. True justice for these children requires more than expressions of regret; it demands transparent investigation, meaningful structural change across the NHS, and a firm commitment that patient safety will never again be compromised by silence, hierarchy, or delayed action.
Further Reading & Resources
- Great Ormond Street surgeon Yaser Jabbar harmed 94 children, report finds | The Independent
- Rogue surgeon harmed 94 children at Great Ormond Street Hospital with kids left disabled and ‘scarred for life’
- Great Ormond Steet surgeon harmed nearly 100 children, report finds -as victim says bungled op left him in ‘horrifying’ pain | Daily Mail Online
- Great Ormond Street doctor who botched surgery harmed nearly 100 children – BBC News
- Great Ormond Street Hospital surgeon ‘harmed almost 100 child patients’ over five years – Mirror Online
- Great Ormond Street missed eight chances to stop surgeon who harmed 94 children

Renata The Editor of DisabledEntrepreneur.uk - DisabilityUK.co.uk - DisabilityUK.org - CMJUK.com Online Journals, suffers From OCD, Cerebellar Atrophy & Rheumatoid Arthritis. She is an Entrepreneur & Published Author, she writes content on a range of topics, including politics, current affairs, health and business. She is an advocate for Mental Health, Human Rights & Disability Discrimination.
She has embarked on studying a Bachelor of Law Degree with the goal of being a human rights lawyer.
Whilst her disabilities can be challenging she has adapted her life around her health and documents her journey online.
Disabled Entrepreneur - Disability UK Online Journal Working in Conjunction With CMJUK.com Offers Digital Marketing, Content Writing, Website Creation, SEO, and Domain Brokering.
Disabled Entrepreneur - Disability UK is an open platform that invites contributors to write articles and serves as a dynamic marketplace where a diverse range of talents and offerings can converge. This platform acts as a collaborative space where individuals or businesses can share their expertise, creativity, and products with a broader audience.


