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PatientPlus articles are written for doctors and so the language can be technical. However, some people find that they add depth to the articles found in the other sections of this website which are written for non-medical people.
Clinical Negligence
Clinical Negligence formerly known as "medical negligence" is the process by which a patient takes his medical attendants to a civil court for compensation - it is not about professional conduct or terms of service.
- In order for negligence to be proven a Claimant (usually the patient himself) must show that the doctor owed a duty of care to the patient, that the doctor was negligent in his management, and also that the patient suffered harm as a result. The Claimant has to succeed on both liability and causation to obtain compensation.
- Liability to show that the doctor or nurse must have been found to have acted in a manner that no other similar professional would have done and;
- Causation that harm has resulted which would not otherwise have occurred (on the balance of probability i.e. the action of the doctor or nurse was more than 50% likely to have caused the harm).
- The Claimant's loss is then assessed in terms of quantum (loss of current and future earnings, reduced quality of life, mental anguish) and the recompense is money - nothing more and nothing less.
The Bolam Test
This was recognised in the classic direction of McNair J to a jury in Bolam-v-Friern Hospital Management Committee
- A doctor is not guilty of negligence if he has acted in accordance with a practice accepted as proper and responsible by a responsible body of medical men skilled in that particular art - Putting it the other way round, a doctor is not negligent if he is acting in accordance with such a practice merely because there is a body of opinion which takes the contrary view.
- The implications of this for those in primary care is that the standard against which one is judged is that of ones own peers - not that of the wisest and most prudent doctor who exists and not that of a hospital consultant who may carelessly venture opinion as to the management in general practice. By the same principal the persons who give evidence to the Court about the standards in general practice can only be general practitioners who were practising at the time of the case.
- The standard to be applied is not that of a most astute doctor or necessarily that of a Professor of General Practice, but that of an ordinary and competent GP acting responsibly.
The Bolitho Test
In the case of Bolitho, the House of Lords decided in effect that if the management by a body of responsible doctors was not demonstrably reasonable it would not necessarily constitute a defence. If professional opinion called in support of a defence case was not capable of withstanding logical analysis, then the court would be entitled to hold that the body of opinion was not reasonable or responsible. More simply put- you cannot defend a case on the basis of a current practice that is not reasonable or logical.
In the case of Gregg-v-Scott brought to the House of Lords in 2002 it was established that a patient must prove that a doctors action or lack of it caused him to suffer injury and not just the chance of avoiding an injury. In practical terms this means that a doctor failing to diagnose a case of cancer in which a patient has only a 25% chance of survival would not be found negligent. Only if the chance of survival was over 50% ie a probabilitiy of a cure rather than a chance of a cure, would negligence be found.
The rules by which civil cases are conducted are the Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) and doctors giving evidence as expert witnesses have to follow Part 35 of those rules in the submission of medical evidence.
The most important rule here is that "experts" have to understand that they are there to advise the court and not to take the side of the party who is paying their fees. They have to remain impartial and should not for instance, enter into fees being paid conditional to the outcome of a case.
These rules apply strictly in England and Wales but not in Scotland or Northern Ireland.
Any doctor submitting opinion that might be used in a court would be advised to end the opinion with the statement:
"I confirm that insofar as the facts stated in my report are within my own knowledge, I have made clear they are and I believe them to be true and the opinions I have expressed represent my true and complete professional opinion".
The Civil Procedure Rules have to be adhered to by the lawyers:
- Once a claim is being made a Letter of Claim has to be sent there are then several weeks allowed in order to gather information and to prepare a defence and respond to the letter of claim.
- If the Claimant wishes to proceed further they then need to issue proceedings stating Particulars of Claim and Particulars of Negligence.
- The Defence then issues a formal defence and any statements to support that defence.
- Experts from both sides will have prepared reports and at some stage the information will be exchanged, if the case continues the Court will order a meeting of Experts to try and define the areas of disagreement. Finally, only as last resort will it come to trial.
The process is prolonged and painful for all parties so is best avoided.
A case must be brought within 3 years of knowledge of harm suffered- so if a patient thinks he has received negligent treatment today he has 36 months in which to file a claim. Exceptions to this rule are:
- At the time of the injury the claimant was a child (under 18) - no time limit.
- At the time of the injury the claimant was mentally ill - limitation period starts from the time of their recovery.
- At the Court's discretion - the judge can decide that a case that is "out of time" can proceed.
Until recent years the vast majority of clinical negligence cases were funded by the tax payer through legal aid (the Legal Services Commission). Unless the patient is very poor he is now unlikely to receive legal aid. Increasingly the cost of civil litigation is funded by conditional fee agreements with solicitors (no win no fee) or After-the-Event insurance. This is insurance taken out by the patient to pay legal expenses if he loses his case. Legal expense insurance also often comes as part of a home insurance policy. These changes generally mean it is more difficult to bring poor cases against doctors. On the other hand they do reflect an increasingly litigious society and one in which doctors can be tempted to practice defensive medicine.
- Make good contemporaneous notes.
- Record all patient contacts.
- Record all DNA'S.
- Always give and record follow up advice.
- Detect and act upon abnormal results.
- Choose computer software that encourages good records.
- Give greatest weight to the more serious diagnosis.
- Litigation harms doctor and patient alike.
- Some patients just want an apology but they can still sue.
- Complaints response letters need to be written extremely carefully.
- Consult your medical insurance company - they are the experts.
- Remember we all make mistakes; that's why we pay insurance.
Internet and Further Reading
- Dept.of Constitutional Affairs; Access to Justice Final Report. The Right Honourable the Lord Woolf, Master of the Rolls JULY 1996
- Dept. of Constitutional Affairs; A new focus for civil legal aid:encouraging early resolution; discouraging unnecessary litigation. 2004
DocID: 1969
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp24929
Last Updated: 11 May 2007
Review Date: 10 May 2009
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