Well, I'm obviously looking in from the outside, not being from your area, but it seems (from the BBC News reporting tonight) there are some figures being bandied around indicating that the death rate in that unit was twice the national average, and that the unit has lost its senior surgeon, the two remaining ones being junior status, and that there was a marked reluctance to refer complex procedures to more specialist centres. Two people, Sir Bruce Keogh (the guy who ordered the closure) said there was "clear blue water" between the death rates at Leeds and other units, while the guy who was responsible for the clandestine release of the mortality data, a Professor Sir Roger Boyle who was interviewed live, said that he felt he had to be a whistleblower especially in the light of everything that's gone on in Mid Staffordshire, and he couldn't have slept easily if he hadn't done what he did.
"With the Easter weekend coming up, I'm afraid I just could not rest without sharing this information and helping Sir Bruce to come to the decision that he did," he said. "We cannot take risks with these children.
"It is better to do a 'safety first' approach and suspend operating for days or weeks - whatever is necessary to get to the absolute truth."http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-21974053