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Asian NHS therapist struck off after English claim and inability to understand colleagues

A speech therapist claimed English proficiency she did not have, then asked interviewers to type questions instead of speaking

NHS therapist struck

The Trust referred the matter to the Health and Care Professions Council and confirmed she had not worked there since 2024

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Highlights

  • Sriperambuduru claimed English was her first language on her NHS application form.
  • Colleagues flagged communication problems within two weeks of her starting the role.
  • The tribunal found she intended to deceive the Trust to gain employment.
A speech and language therapist was struck off the professional register after admitting she could not understand her colleagues, despite claiming English was her first language on her NHS job application.
Sai Keerthana Sriperambuduru joined York and Scarborough Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in October 2023, having declared English as her native tongue, which meant she was not required to prove her language proficiency separately.
At a review meeting on 7 November 2023, she acknowledged that Telugu was her native language and that English was in fact her second language.
Colleagues noticed communication problems within two weeks, according to a Daily Mail report.

What the panel found

Her line manager told the Health and Care Professions Tribunal Service hearing that during the interview process, Sriperambuduru had requested to use a chat-box facility so interviewers could type questions to her rather than ask them face to face.

The manager described this as "very unusual" given that Sriperambuduru was living in the UK at the time.


The panel said this showed an attempt to conceal her difficulties. At a review meeting in November 2023, she admitted Telugu was her actual first language.

By December she said she was taking English lessons outside work but told her manager she struggled to transcribe sessions because children and parents were speaking too quickly.

Transcription is a core part of the role, used to record a patient's speech sounds and identify where difficulties arise. She was dismissed in June 2024, eight months after being hired.

The Trust referred the matter to the Health and Care Professions Council and confirmed she had not worked there since 2024.

Sriperambuduru argued to the panel that because her education was conducted in English, it could reasonably be considered her first language.

The panel rejected this, noting the application form explicitly states that studying in English does not qualify as having English as a first language.

The panel concluded she intended to deceive the Trust and removed her from the register.

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Racist incidents against NHS nurses rise 78 per cent

The RCN says calls from ethnic minority nurses reporting racism rose by 70 per cent between 2022 and 2025

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Racist incidents against NHS nurses rise 78 per cent

Highlights

  • Nursing staff reported 6,812 racist incidents in 2025, up from 3,652 in 2022.
  • RCN warns real figures are far higher due to widespread under-reporting.
  • From October, NHS employers will be legally liable for harassment of staff by patients.
Racist abuse against NHS nurses has gone up sharply. New figures show a 78 per cent rise in reported incidents over the past four years.
The Royal College of Nursing gathered this data through Freedom of Information requests sent to NHS trusts and health boards across the UK.
The findings show that nursing staff reported more than 21,000 incidents of racial abuse between 2022 and 2025. In 2025 alone, there were 6,812 incidents, up from 3,652 in 2022.
That means a new report of racist abuse was being made every 77 minutes somewhere in the NHS.

The incidents paint a disturbing picture of what many nurses face on a daily basis. One nurse was called a monkey by a colleague.

A patient threw a hot drink at a nurse and then followed it with racial abuse. In one case, a patient's family said they did not want black nurses looking after their relative.

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