This is why they have medical experts to look at everything then explain it to the jury .. personal I think the jury understood very well ...after all they arrived at various verdicts..not all guilty
Then it brings us back to professional trial witnesses institution… Dr. Evans is under fire, it seems, and for a good reason if we take in his statements after the trial. But definitely, something needs to be changed.
What the story brings to mind is a test given by a certain school to US medical students. They are not told the name of the person (usually someone famous) but are provided with full medical history. The task is to determine the cause of death. Some cases are straightforward, some, very tricky. And of course, they are not 100% reliable, but one thing is pertinent, by not providing the name of the person or the story around him, a certain measure of objectivity is reached.
The case of Lucy Letby is shockingly subjective. The objective evidence does not match the accusation, IMO. But the subjective traits of the personalities involved, OMG! And it remains subjective and honestly, I see less and less of the science nor even art of medicine here and more and more of undue individualism.
Me having been raised in the medical world, doctors (and less so, nurses) are the most common group known to me, the second one being actors. Doctors possess all ranges of human qualities and I don’t expect them to stand out in any exclusive way as humans, ever. Except for: most won’t leave their patients in dire straights, such as at the operating table during artillery fire at war, for example, or during a natural disaster. The connection between them and their patients exists…so I am absolutely sure that the case started not as “bad statistics” but as “kids dying”, and I think there was honest grief on the unit.
(And, they can make mistakes. The best ones do, so I am not holding individual cases like hitting the liver in a preemie against them. The more they work, the more mistakes. Statistics, nothing else).
As to the rest, don’t expect them to be any better or different from all of us. Uneducated to jump to a tall conclusion that a tiny sheet of paper with shifts points at someone being a murderer? (Odd and unduly suspicious), but can happen. Being instigated by colleagues and believing in gossips? Sure. Playing the Superman on the unit and in court? We saw it. I remember a lot of stories that lasted from nothing but lasted for years.
What I want to say? Subjectively where a lot of people are working in a small unit exists. It is not IT where you can find a bug. It is incessant human interaction. But between that and the final ruling there have been some objective measures to test …urban legends, for the lack of a better word? Nothing like this happened, and it is sad that a lot of time and money was spent…to no avail, MOO.