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This narrative article explores why healthcare systems repeatedly fail to learn from preventable deaths. We present Mrs L, who died less than 6 weeks after routine hip replacement surgery. She had attended preoperative assessment with hypertension and renal impairment, which worsened before surgery. Postoperatively, she became hypotensive and hypoxic overnight, but the senior staff were not informed. She developed multiple organ infarctions, required two further operations and died 3 days later. The Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman identified multiple missed opportunities to intervene. This case reflects a persistent problem. Studies show that 5.2% of hospital deaths are preventable, with surgical patients at higher risk. Despite decades of inquiries and reports, the same issues recur: poor clinical monitoring, diagnostic errors and inadequate fluid management. In practice, high-profile investigations rarely translate into frontline learning. The 2017 National Quality Board guidance now requires National Health Service (NHS) Trusts to publicly report on deaths and learning, but real change often comes from bereaved families rather than healthcare systems. Connor Sparrowhawk’s death and the subsequent family campaign exposed widespread failures in death investigation processes. What works? When families like Joshua Titcombe’s and Elaine Bromiley’s drive change, systems actually improve. Their personal stories create experiential learning that statistics cannot achieve. As healthcare professionals, we need both systematic processes for reviewing deaths and personal narratives that make lessons stick.